Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Funding puts new school plan on hold

- BY REBECCA MCCURDY

A PROMISED primary school in Dundee’s Western Gateway has been put in doubt as residents are forced to wait up to a year on a government funding decision.

Dundee City Council awaits informatio­n on the criteria needed to apply for the Scottish Government’s Learning Estate Investment Programme which would allow it to build the school.

Education Secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville has now confirmed the plans will be set out over the next 12 months – despite councils previously being told the informatio­n would be given before Christmas.

It leaves a question mark over the Western Gateway school, which will only be built if selected as part of the government funding scheme, which the local authority will apply for once it receives the criteria.

The school, which could cost up to £16 million to build, is expected to be completed in 2025 however the delay leaves its timeline up in the air.

Ms Somerville confirmed the delay in response to a question from Dundee City West MSP Joe Fitzpatric­k.

She wrote: “The Scottish Government intends to announce the projects that will form part of phase three of the programme within the next 12 months.

“We will write to local authoritie­s seeking investment proposals in 2022 and in the meantime will work with local government to agree the developmen­t programme timeline.”

Residents have blasted the setback after homeowners paid approximat­ely £5,000 each in a ‘roof tax’ towards the school’s constructi­on.

Ardler and St Fergus primary schools, the community’s nearest catchment schools, are more than five miles away.

Community group chairman Bill Batchelor said the delay was a “major disappoint­ment”.

He said: “We are not going to sit back and accept this. The demand for primary school education is still so strong in this area.

“We are not going to accept bussing our children to a school 5.6 miles away.”

Parents local to the Dundee suburb instead opt to send their children to schools closer by in Perth and Kinross and Angus – however these schools are facing capacity caps, which could impact enrolment.

Michael Marra, Labour North East MSP, said delays to the school are now “inevitable”.

He said: “Many councils have project proposals ready to go, and with this delay it puts them in jeopardy.

“The school estate is vital to curriculum delivery, and the past two years have shown that much of our estate is not conducive to health and wellbeing, with issues around ventilatio­n.”

Following the reply, Mr Fitzpatric­k and Dundee’s children and families convener Councillor Stewart Hunter have written to Ms Somerville to seek additional clarity on when the applicatio­ns will open.

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