Taupo & Turangi Herald

Upston slams classroom delay

Still waiting for answers over Tauhara College

- Laurilee McMichael

Taupo¯ MP Louise Upston says she’s still waiting for answers on why Tauhara College hasn’t received more on-site classrooms to allow it to return to something approachin­g normality during term two.

Four blocks of the college’s ageing prefab classrooms were badly damaged in a downpour on November 25 last year with 37 classrooms rendered unusable.

The Ministry of Education moved quickly to approve a temporary classroom village of 13 rooms and the college delayed the start of term one to allow the classrooms to be finished.

Senior students have spent part of their time working in the school’s assembly hall, converted into a learning hub, and last term were also learning one day a week at home.

Originally Tauhara College expected to have the school gym repaired and reopened by the start of term two, as well as another block of eight double classrooms (16 teaching spaces) in place for technology and science subjects by the start of term two.

But it was dealt a blow last month when the ministry announced at short notice that the second block of classrooms would not be ready by term two. It is now expected to be completed in midJuly.

With a lot of juggling and by moving some of its technology and physical education classes off site, the school has managed to come up with a timetable that allows all its 703 students to be at school five days a week.

But Ms Upston, the National Party MP for Taupo¯, says while the ministry pulled out all the stops to have the first block ready by term one, as well as converting the school hall into a learning hub, she was very concerned when she heard that the second block would not be done in the promised time frame.

“To be fair, what was delivered by term one, they [the school] were fairly happy with,” Ms Upston says. “From there though, things have really unravelled.

“I’ve talked to students, teachers, parents, and I think on the back of what they put up with last year [with Covid-19 disruption­s] it was just all becoming too much.”

Ms Upston said promising the school more classrooms by term two and then changing the timeline was “grossly unfair”.

“To not deliver is bad enough, but then to delay telling the school in a timely manner of their failure to deliver is appalling service by the ministry. It feels like because they got the first set of buildings up they’ve taken the foot off the accelerato­r.”

Ms Upston said while nobody wants to see a rushed repair job and money being wasted, this was an emergency situation. She had written to Education Minister Chris Hipkins raising her concerns about the delay. She has not yet received a response.

School principal Ben Hancock said it was frustratin­g there had been a four week delay to the new classrooms through the ministry’s internal review process, which the school had not been allowed to be part of. However, the staff had done “a bit of a juggling act” to find a solution that worked for all the students.

With the “wonderful support” of Wairakei Resort, food technology

students had been bussed there for practical lessons since the middle of term one, and after a huge amount of work getting it up and running, the school’s new off-site hard materials technology space in Tauhara Rd would be ready for use later this week. Students are also being transporte­d to the Taupo¯ Events Centre for physical education lessons.

“We’ve got everybody here which is the first step. There’s kids in rooms, the teachers are more comfortabl­e with the new normal..

“We have a timeline that we are working towards and we’re working with the ministry to get kids into these rooms. We’re appreciati­ve of the buildings we have got and the Livingston­e Building team have been amazing.”

The new classroom block will include science facilities and a hospitalit­y and home economics suite and work on it was going at pace,

Ministry of Education head of education infrastruc­ture service Kim Shannon said in a statement that all the eight double-modular

buildings (16 classrooms) were now on site at Tauhara College and work on them was progressin­g well with the classrooms expected to be available for use from mid-July.

Ms Shannon said when the ministry was planning to have the classrooms brought on site it looked at whether it could find a permanent location for them to avoid them having to be moved again in future as the school is developed.

“This process added to our initial timeframe for delivery. In addition, the favourable conditions that enabled the rapid delivery of stage one — long days, dry weather, availabili­ty of labour, the buildings being pre-built and already available, and the school being closed for holidays — are not present for this stage of work.

“We are continuing to refine the scope of the gymnasium work which will determine exact timeframes for completion. We currently expect the work to the gymnasium to be completed during term four,” the statement said.

 ?? Photo / Laurilee McMichael ?? Builders at work constructi­ng the second block of classrooms at Tauhara College. The block was originally expected to be ready at the start of term two, but will now be finished in mid-July.
Photo / Laurilee McMichael Builders at work constructi­ng the second block of classrooms at Tauhara College. The block was originally expected to be ready at the start of term two, but will now be finished in mid-July.
 ?? Photo / Laurilee McMichael ?? The first block of new classrooms at Tauhara College was completed under urgency in early February.
Photo / Laurilee McMichael The first block of new classrooms at Tauhara College was completed under urgency in early February.
 ??  ?? Taupo MP Louise Upston
Taupo MP Louise Upston

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