Glasgow Times

Campaigner­s in vow over primary school control

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CAMPAIGNER­S have vowed to continue the fight to save their local primary school after a bid to remove it from council control was rejected by the Education Secretary.

Campaigner­s for closurethr­eatened St Joseph’s Primary School in Milngavie, East Dunbartons­hire, said they are “very disappoint­ed” by the decision taken by John Swinney, but they are determined to carry on.

Mr Swinney set out a raft of reforms to Scotland’s school system in a statement at Holyrood on Thursday.

Rejecting the bid to take St Joseph’s out of local authority control to be run by the community, he said councils will retain a ‘’vital role’’ in the education system.

The plans were first submitted to the Scottish Government in February 2015 after receiving unanimous support from the school’s parent council.

Chair Helen Williams said: “We are very disappoint­ed that the Scottish Government is not supporting our proposals to keep St Joseph’s in Milngavie.

“After sitting on our proposals for more than two years, it would have been nice to get a phone call from John Swinney himself instead of an anonymous civil servant.

“The Education Secretary ought to know that he won’t improve education by allowing good schools to close. All we were asking for was a pilot to prove that a community-led school could work successful­ly. This is a lost opportunit­y for everyone and time is running out.”

Paula Speirs, whose two children attended St Joseph’s, said: “The success of Jordanhill, in Glasgow, shows that giving parents a bigger say in schools can help raise standards. We don’t understand why the Scottish Government won’t let us do the same in Milngavie.”

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