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Thousands of Scots pupils 'face decade in crumbling old schools'

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Published Date: 30 June 2009
THOUSANDS of pupils across Scotland face a "decade of leaking roofs, crumbling buildings and inadequate facilities", it has been claimed.



Earlier this month, education secretary Fiona Hyslop announced a £1.25 billion school building programme.

However, it will provide for only 55 new schools, while 134 are judged to be in bad condition – class D – and a further 698 are considered p
oor – class C.

And it has emerged that those in the poorest condition are not guaranteed to be a priority.

A leaked letter from the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (Cosla) warned council leaders other information apart from need would be taken into consideration by ministers before any cash is allocated.

The letter, from Isabel Hutton, Cosla's education spokeswoman, said talks were needed "urgently" with the Scottish Government about which councils would get the money.

She wrote: "We understand the Scottish Government wish to discuss with us an intention to use several years' worth of school core facts data – previously submitted by authorities – to identify the schools in the worst condition.

"In addition, they are considering other intelligence to identify the most unsuitable schools that also need to be replaced."

Rhona Brankin, Labour's education spokeswoman, said: "The parents, pupils and teachers in the category D schools would think they would be first in the queue to get their schools rebuilt.

"The statistics say these 134 schools are in the worst condition and desperately need to be replaced. But the SNP know there are many schools that are categorised as Class C or even Class B, such as Portobello High in Edinburgh, that are in a very poor state of repair.

"One thing is for certain: in September, there will be thousands of parents, pupils and teachers that can look forward to a decade of leaking roofs, crumbling buildings and inadequate facilities. They will also know that the SNP are to blame."

The public services independent watchdog Audit Scotland has warned it will take decades to bring Scotland's crumbling schools up to 21st-century standards.

In 2003, the then Scottish Executive promised all buildings would be out of the "poor" category by 2018. However, Audit Scotland has said this will now take until 2028.

There are about 2,720 council schools in Scotland. Over the past decade, 219 have been rebuilt and many refurbished.

A spokesman for the EIS, Scotland's biggest teaching union, warned the government could be seen to be watering down another vow.

He said: "Given the poor condition of so much of the school estate, the decision to prioritise school reconstruction must always be based on need before any other factors.

"By seeking talks with Cosla to rewrite the ways in which the condition of schools is assessed, the Scottish Government is opening itself to criticism that it is watering down another key promise on education."

A spokesman for Ms Hyslop blamed the previous Labour- Liberal Democrat administration for the poor state of schools and said the Scottish Government would work with Cosla to ensure the best information was used in deciding which councils received money.

He added: "This will involve not only school categorisations, but all relevant information, including information gleaned from discussions with local authorities, visits, exchanges and evidence gathered by the school estate team."





The full article contains 550 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 29 June 2009 9:31 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

,

29/06/2009 22:46:53
Comment Removed By Administrator
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2

Jerry Springer,

29/06/2009 22:54:10
Well we all know whose fault this is.

Alex Salmond and the SNP.
3

Jock Tamson,

Scotland, Caledonia, Alba 30/06/2009 00:57:13
The Scots pupils managed to learn in crumbling schools before Labour lost to the SNP in 2007.
4

Iainbroch,

30/06/2009 01:13:34
Time that time was called on the crumbling Johstone Press!
5

,

30/06/2009 01:46:36
Comment Removed By Administrator
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6

Fletty73,

Stirling 30/06/2009 02:39:47
Another example of the SNP having to sort out an inherited mess from those previous Labour mafia crooks.
7

fife runner,

30/06/2009 06:51:12
problem is the upgrading of schools should have been carried out on a scheduled list. like a car if it is not serviced regularly then all you are left with is a big bill in the end.
8

madrab,

Edinburgh 30/06/2009 07:18:27
Scottish Labour, a mix of crooks, halwits and chancers.

Look at the mess they have left behind.
9

Andrew Morton,

Berkshire 30/06/2009 07:46:53
There is a similar problem in England and it is entirely the fault of Labour.

Too much money had been diverted into fruitless wars and dare I say it, immigration and not enough put into the schools and infrastructure.

Oh dear oh dear.
10

Fed up,

Edinburgh 30/06/2009 08:25:49
This is absolutely pathetic. I was one of the first years to go through senior school at the "new" James Gillespies High School. These buildings, apparantly, need replaced but the "old" school in Warrender Park Crescent still seems to be in a decent condition. My daughter has just left a school whose main building is 350 years old and still going well - but then it's an idenpendent school! It's all in the maintenance and this has been sadly lacking in the schools run by the council for over 25 years.
11

Fed up,

Edinburgh 30/06/2009 08:32:16
Sorry, should be "independent" in #11 - not as typed!
12

,

30/06/2009 08:37:02
Comment Removed By Administrator
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13

fat lord prodder,

somewhere in alba 30/06/2009 08:47:20
if you want to see what labour in power were really like,you only have to look at craigmillar,where the area was given tons of cash only for the paul nolan cabal to squander and give themselves cushy jobs,and high wages
http://www.edinburghsucks.com/?s=paul+nolan
along with page after page of labour lies and theft
14

fat lord prodder,

somewhere in alba 30/06/2009 08:55:16
labour was too busy swanning about the schemes,as they were the elected councilors
for years they could have made more cuts than jack the ripper,and still get elected time after time
a point of interest in last years forth byelection
where labour councilor cammy days leaflets had so called locals on it spouting praise for labour
one in particular was muirhouse wifie,stating,"we alaways get things done with a labour councilor",then why was ex provost hinds ,going to get a gubbing at the council elections in muirhouse?,she who was so popular down there that she jumped wards to the more posh ward of inverleith,which had always been a stronghold of tory and lib dem as well
where labour are the councilor ,one can almost smell the sleeze,the corruption in edinburgh is almost palpable
they put pigs and their troughs to shame
15

Euan,

Edinburgh 30/06/2009 09:58:36
This is a very sad state of affairs indeed, that in Edinburgh at least, we are seeing primary schools closing left,right and centre, major secondary schools falling into disrepair through under investment and lack of maintenance.

Yet at the same time Edinburgh's citizens are seeing what may very well end up being the best part of £1 BILLION being squandered on a next-to-useless tram project.

Just shows you exactly where our democratically elected representatives priorities lie doesn't it?

What a disgrace.


16

Letters From Muscat,

edinburgh 30/06/2009 10:21:59
I commented on this ages ago, and the answer was always : it's a separate budget don' t you know?
the silence of the trams? aye right the old James Gillespie building is still going strong, served us fine in the early sixties..... these modern buildings : you could shoot peas through them: as my old mother used to say.
17

letmein,

hinterland 30/06/2009 10:45:41
Another labour ploy to appeal to the small brained masses. Blame it on the SNP.
Rufus and sorry susy one and the same disgusting creature from tha black buffoon.
Your post was filthy this morning and should have been removed, which really points out that you work for Johnstone press.
18

bluehead,

edinburgh 30/06/2009 10:51:19
it is not just the schools that are crumbling whole of this country is in a crumbling state as well,
and as long as this labour mob are on the loose it will continue to crumble even further
when brown and his mob sold Britain to the foreigners
that started the big crumble and now that we have to obey orders from the foreigners and are no longer masters of our own fate the crumbling will turn in to an earthquake
poor old britain!!what a dreadful mess to be in!!!!
19

Arfur,

30/06/2009 11:28:28
There are about 2,720 council schools in Scotland. Over the past decade, 219 have been rebuilt

However, it will provide for only 55 new schools, while 134 are judged to be in bad condition – class D – and a further 698 are considered poor – class C.






But really what the hootsman has reported here is - after 10 years of Labour schools are a mess (but lets blame it on the guys that have only just got in) and The SNP have announced to do 55 schools in the next few years ..............or 25% of what Labour did in ten years in the next few years.
20

Sedov,

30/06/2009 12:07:02
We need a massive programme of public works to rebuild or schools, provide homes for everyone, decent hospitals and a transport network etc etc. This would also provide the jobs we need

If we can prop up the banks and the arms industry by billions we can spend the money on the basics.

WE can do this through a bold socialist programme - but of course Labour and the SNP only want to help bosses restore their profits at our expense.

Revolution now! ( or at least after my lunch break)
21

Gruntfuttock,

30/06/2009 12:39:51
Salmond is not to blame for this nor is Labour. We are all to blame for this lamentable situation. Scotland is a country that ceased to value education sometime around the 1960's. It became a non-issue. We took more pride in our odious banks than our world-class education system. We abandoned the Calvinist concept of the common good and instead looked towards quick fixes e.g. blame the teachers, blame politicians, blame Westminster but never accepted any shared responsibility. We are reaping what we sowed. Its time we all grew up as a Nation and got our priorities right; a poorly educated Nation whether independent or otherwise has a grim future.
22

Tartan Viking,

30/06/2009 12:53:28
#2 Roofass.

You have the memory span of a goldfish. You have forgotted the decades and decades of rotten Lyebour rule that brought this state of affairs in the first place.

You sad person. Incapable of understanding the truth.

There used to be a saying in politics - 'you can fool some of the people ALL of the time, and all of the people SOME of the time'

You are in the first category.
23

Iain Mac,

30/06/2009 12:54:42
Don't see how the SNP can be blamed. Labour and Tories did little or nothing in their decades of power. In fact, Labour's answer is to sell our public services to the private sector? Should schools be paying some private landlord 'rent' for a cheaply made school for the next 40 years? No.
24

,

30/06/2009 14:27:21
Comment Removed By Administrator
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25

Stuart y,

Edinburgh 30/06/2009 15:52:34
Its not the state of the buildings that counts in Education. Its the quality of the puplies, parents and staff.
26

Stuart y,

Edinburgh 30/06/2009 15:53:06
and I can't type!
27

El Franko,

30/06/2009 17:55:55
Priorities. Priorities. I fear our CO2 allowance for concrete production and other building works will be used up for the huge dods of steel and concrete required to construct windfarms. These, although by themselves leading to increased CO2 emissions, are required as acts of religious homage to the greenie gods, who as well as being angry and impatient gods, are also horribly irrational and malicious.

 

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