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School cuts would "devastate" Inishowen 26.08.09

by Liam Porter, Inishowen Independent

AN INISHOWEN councillor has claimed that cuts in education proposed in the McCarthy Report would be devastating for schools in the peninsula. Councillor Padraig MacLochlainn, who was speaking in advance of a ‘leave our schools alone’ protest due to take place in Buncrana’s Market Square at noon on Saturday, said yesterday that children should not be punished because adults had messed up.
“Already we have a situation where schools in Carndonagh, Newtowncunningham and Muff are losing a teacher. We also have cutbacks in the allocation of Special Needs Assistants but if the proposals in the McCarthy Report come into effect it would be devastating for many schools in Inishowen.”
Councillor MacLochlainn said that Saturday’s protest in Buncrana would be replicated in Letterkenny and Donegal Town.
“The protest is being organised by Sinn Féin in order to let the public know where we stand on this issue. We realise that the people who will really drive this will be teachers unions and parents groups, but we are making a stand before the schools year starts to make people aware that these cuts are not necessary.”
The local councillor said that if the McCarthy Report proposals were implemented there would be all sorts of implications for local schools including the possible closure of some small rural schools and bigger class sizes.
Councillor Padraig MacLochlainn
“We want to let people know there are alternatives to this and we should not be allowed to sleepwalk into a situation where the cuts have to be accepted. We keep getting told that there are no alternatives, but that isn’t the case.”
Meanwhile Fine Gael TD Joe McHugh has called on Bus Éireann to exercise leniency with parents who have missed the first instalment date to pay school transport fees for the coming school year.
Speaking after discussions with a number of parents caught in this situation, Deputy McHugh said that in these difficult times the Government should be doing all it can to encourage and support children in their education.
“Increasing school transport fees by 79% and then penalising parents who can’t afford this is not the way forward. In recent weeks I have met with a number of parents who worry that their children will be stranded on the roadside when the school term begins. In the past payments were made three times a year – one payment each term – but now fees must be paid biannually, at the end of July and again in December. This imposes added financial headaches on parents during difficult times.”
According to Deputy McHugh the government has very substantially increased the cost of school transport for the coming school year.
“Junior post-primary fees have increased by 79% from €132 annually to a crippling €300 per child. Senior post-primary pupils are also being hit with a 28% rise, while fees for junior cycle pupils will have shot up from €99 to a new high of €168 since the start of 2008.”
He added: “Money has never been tighter and today parents of school—going families are struggling to make ends meets. At a time when 20,000 Donegal families are affected by unemployment, families are being forced to shell out in the region of €5,000 a year in extra Government taxes and charges.”
According to Deputy McHugh the Government has attempted to justify these exorbitant increases speaking in terms of “phasing out” three—for—two seating.
But, he concluded: “The responsibility for this should lie with the Government and not with parents. Bus Éireann must exercise leniency with those who have missed the July date.”
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