Carmarthen Journal

Questions over small schools missing out on share of funding

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

PRESSURE is being put on the Welsh Government to explain why no small schools in Wales appear to have benefited from hundreds of millions of pounds of capital funding.

Councils, especially rural ones, have had to make controvers­ial decisions about closing small schools, for reasons including declining pupil numbers and difficulti­es recruiting staff.

That led to Welsh ministers introducin­g a presumptio­n against the closure of rural schools in its school organisati­on code.

At the same time the Welsh Government has, along with councils, been paying for a vast programme of school modernisat­ion and new builds.

Carmarthen­shire councillor Darren Price told a cabinet meeting that he had received an email from a Welsh Government official to say they were not aware of a rural school with fewer than 50 pupils receiving a share of this 21st Century School Programme funding. Cllr Price, who is not a cabinet member but has been leading an education scrutiny task and finish group, said this had come “as a bit of a shock”.

He said it was obvious to him that the programme of school rebuilding and the presumptio­n against the closing of of small schools “are not quite alongside each other”.

Cabinet member Cllr Linda Evans said she thought every council would want to know what the benefits of the 21st Century School Programme were for small schools. “We have to have fairness,” she said.

The task and finish group also looked at other matters, such as how the council consulted on its various education policies. These include altering the language in which lessons are taught.

The Plaid Cymru-independen­t cabinet endorsed the group’s six interim recommenda­tions, and will write to the Welsh Government on the funding issue for small schools.

Speaking afterwards, Cllr Price said he felt the funding process for new and modernised schools was heavily focused on financial criteria, in turn pushing councils towards shutting small schools.

Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg, the Welsh Language Society, said rural communitie­s were being let down, and that it would be contacting Education

Minister Jeremy Miles to explain why no small schools seem to have received 21st Century School Programme money.

The Welsh Government said bids for 21st Century funding were submitted by councils themselves, and that every proposal was then carefully assessed based on its strength rather than the size of the school.

A Welsh Government spokesman said: “A presumptio­n against closure doesn’t mean a rural school will never close, but the case for closure must be strong and not taken until all viable alternativ­es have been considered.”

 ?? ROB BROWNE ?? No small schools have benefited from huge sums of money to rebuild or modernise facilities.
ROB BROWNE No small schools have benefited from huge sums of money to rebuild or modernise facilities.

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