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Council accused of 'underhand tactics' in school closure plans



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Published Date: 30 June 2008
PARENTS of children at two under-threat primaries say "underhand tactics" from the council are forcing to move their children to other schools.
Bonnington, Lismore and Westburn primary schools are facing the axe under proposals revealed earlier this month. While education chiefs propose Westburn should remain open until next summer, they recommend that Bonnington and Lismore close for good at Christmas, which parents say is hitting the schools hard.

Stewart Muir, co-chairman of Bonnington's parent council, claims closing the school half-way through the year is nothing but "malicious". Although a public consultation on all the closure proposals will get under way in August, Mr Muir believes "the writing is on the wall".

He said at least ten parents – including himself – have decided to remove their children from Bonnington to avoid them having to change schools at Christmas.

Under the council's proposals, if Bonnington were to close, its pupils would either go to Leith Primary or one of the other schools in the catchment area – Lorne, Trinity, Broughton or Fort.

The two options for Lismore are either Brunstane or Niddrie Mill primaries. But parents have already been ringing round schools desperately trying to secure places for their children.

Mr Muir, whose son Brandon will go into primary three after the holidays, said: "It was a very tough decision to take, a decision I didn't want to take, but my son's education has to come first. It's going to be virtually impossible to get a good school in December and no parent wants to have to uproot their kids at Christmas when it's supposed to be a joyful time.

"I feel like I'm deserting the school, although I'm still going to help it fight as much as I can.

"It seems malicious to close it at Christmas and they're using underhand tactics to scare parents into taking their children out of school now. It's what they've wanted all along."

The school roll at Bonnington is currently 80, which is the second lowest in the city, but Mr Muir believes this will have dropped considerably by the time the new school term starts.

He added: "I think there will be less than 50 kids at the school after summer, and that's a conservative estimate."

Lismore Primary has also been hit hard since the council revealed it is facing closure for the third time in as many years.

Gail Ross, of the Lismore Parents Action Group, said the school – which currently has a roll of 88 pupils – will be lucky if it has 60 pupils after the holidays.

She said: "We have lost quite a lot thanks to this. Without a shadow of a doubt, this is part of the council's plan to try and close us."

The council admits parents from Lismore and Bonnington have been seeking places at other schools in the city, but adds this is not being mirrored at Westburn, which would have a longer stay of execution.

A council spokeswoman said: "We understand this is difficult time and we would like to reiterate that no decisions have been made on the closure of any schools until the consultation period is over. Parents have freedom of choice of where they send their children to school."


The full article contains 546 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 01 July 2008 9:14 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Schools in Edinburgh
 
1

AlanWaters,

NCH 30/06/2008 13:12:42
Gail 'city tree expert' Ross is becoming almost as ubiquitous as the erstwhile Mr Richey in this rag. What next for this scourge of the Cooncil? Cultural attache for Greater Craigmillar or perhaps a role as EN investigative correspondent for the schemes?
2

alex paterson,

edinburgh 30/06/2008 13:33:58
Cutbacks or not they are not moving house,the kids are going to another school.
3

Epicuras,

30/06/2008 13:35:49
mmm, property/land prices are higher in Bonnignton than Westburn or Lismore - which one do you think will close first? like all decisons made by this administration, it's the size of the brown envelope which is the main deciding factor - shame on edinburgh council members, again!
4

jaunty angle,

bingham 30/06/2008 13:59:47
i heard that gail ross doesnae even hv a bairn at lismore
5

angry mum 08,

edinburgh 30/06/2008 14:00:09
gillian tee hasnt even spoken to the parents at bonnington to tell them face to face but she went to the other schools .bonnington will close as there wqill be no one left to fight its so sad that the council will do this to such a great school with great teachers shocking .
6

angry mum 08,

30/06/2008 14:04:37
stewart muir did a lot for bonnington so did his partner .if they ve given up well theres nothing more to say really .the council should be ashamed of themselves for what theyve put every one through .the teachers at bonnington were crying on friday so were the kids and parents so cruel.
7

The Genuine Mario Antoinette,

30/06/2008 14:58:14
That kid is massive.
8

I love to eat Sellotape,

30/06/2008 15:32:06
Longest legs in the world, that boy.
9

,

30/06/2008 16:49:40
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
10

Bingham Parent.,

30/06/2008 17:05:28
So you have to have a child at a school so you can have a opinion ?
With attitudes like some of the above comments it's a wonder the state of some of the parents mind never mind the children. The council want the price of the land nothing more, in all 3 cases, and we as residents of this City shouldn't allow them to take what they want, and i do have children at Lismore, 3 of them, so comment 4 that makes me qualified to offer my opinion, number 1, Gail Ross along with many other fought greatly last time and SAVED us, so keep your stupid coments to yourself, never once has anyone tried to take credit or a pat on the back, well the councillor, local man local issues Bridgeman has and continues to take credit.
11

The Geniune Mario Antionette,

30/06/2008 19:01:55
#6 They should close the school immediately. if your grammer is anything to go buy
12

The Geniune Mario Antionette,

30/06/2008 19:06:18
Brandon !
13

stewart muir,

edinburgh 30/06/2008 20:06:24
The Geniune Mario Antionette your comments are offensive & nasty this issue has affected so many peoples lives but thats something that you are lacking is a life !!
14

,

30/06/2008 20:32:27
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
15

The Geniune Mario Antionette,

01/07/2008 00:06:02
I'm ashamed
16

Broughton Resident,

Edinburgh 04/07/2008 15:20:56
Teachers today have a very difficult job. They are treated as glorified child-minders but when the child doesn't pass exams they are blamed even if the child has been a persistent truant, diruption etc etc. They are told by their management in the school to "just let it run off your back" when they are verbally abused and have no effective means of punishment for the child who throws a chair at them. If a child makes a false accusation, the teacher is immediately suspended and the mud sticks for the rest of his/her career, whether that's in teaching or not. If an accusation is found to be false, the child is given no more than a stern "don't do it again" in most cases.

The working day may be short but there is a lot to be done in the evenings. If the work was all done on school premises, the teacher would be there for the same number of hours as anyone else works. The holidays are long (about 4 weeks more than me in an office) but they have to get away from the children some of the time.

On the other hand, the teachers are taught, managed, advised and inspected by other teachers, most of whom haven't seen the inside of a classroom for years and never want to go back (though they still enjoy their long holidays in many cases). That's where changes need to be made. How can a former teacher based in the Council HQ winding down after a life in teaching possibly know what it's like to teach a class of todays kids, and what can he or she offer to a classroom teacher? Not a lot I'd think.

Teachers also forget that they have become a breed apart. They go to school, university, teacher training then back into a school, sometimes the one they attended. They have no idea of real life or what a real job is like. There is a teacher in an Edinburgh school reaching career end who attended the school as a pupil, returned there to teach and never left. Is that good for the kids?

They should be forced, as part of their training, to do at least a year, possibly
17

Broughton Resident,

Edinburgh 04/07/2008 15:21:46
They should be forced, as part of their training, to do at least a year, possibly two, in a "proper" job, mixing with real people. School inspectors should be in post for a set number of years then return to their school, as should the "advisors" and others based in Council HQ's.

Then things might improve.

 

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