The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Call for council to shelve plans for £100k per child nursery at Abernyte

- ROSS GARDINER

Council officers have been urged to shelf plans to build a new nursery beside Abernyte Primary, which could cost mo r e than £100,000 per child, and focus on finding a more cost-effective solution.

A new nursery would cost £800,000 and house just eight pupils.

Education chiefs laid six options before councillor­s, intended to make the rural school viable after it was saved from closure earlier this year.

The lifelong learning committee asked for the ideas to be finalised for a vote at the end of this academic year, but a few of early drafts have already been met with scepticism.

Three key suggestion­s i nv o l v e reviewing the school’s catchment area, converting part of the building into a nursery, or building a new standalone nurser y in the school grounds.

Augmenting the catchment area to increase the number of youngsters likely to enrol in future is a tried and tested way to boost numbers, but altering Abernyte’s zone may not be as straightfo­rward as expected.

Officers will have to navigate the spider’s web of neighbouri­ng catchments, ensuring any adjustment­s would not jeopardise the sustainabi­lity of small, country schools nearby, such as Kettins, Collace and Longforgan.

Converting part of the building into a nursery could cost £230,000 but adding pre-school places has a track record of boosting school rolls, as Logierait Primary in Highland Perthshire has begun to show.

However, this option is one that would see the school’s capacity practicall­y halved, so the local authority’s planners are also investigat­ing building a standalone nursery, albeit a very small one.

Officers claim this is cheaper than adding an extension but constructi­on costs could rise to more than £800,000.

Pe r t h and Kinross

Council has already paid more than £100,000 in a failed attempt to block the Scottish Government ’s review of the school closure decision, which eventually overturned the local authority’s knife-edge vote.

Carse of Gowrie councillor Angus Forbes said the new-build scheme would be “a staggering amount of money” for a premises that could house so few youngsters.

Although proposals remain in their infancy and a full options appraisal will not be voted on until May following consultati­ons with staff, parents and pupils, the Conservati­ve said he is leaning towards a conversion.

Another option councillor­s were given permission to pursue – keeping the status quo – was also met with hopes of dismissal.

Consultati­ons are expected to begin this year and a vote on the measures to be taken is planned to be conducted by the lifelong learning committee in May.

 ??  ?? CLASS ACTION: Campaigner­s celebrate after Perth and Kinross Council’s decision to close Abernyte Primary School was overturned by the Scottish Government.
CLASS ACTION: Campaigner­s celebrate after Perth and Kinross Council’s decision to close Abernyte Primary School was overturned by the Scottish Government.

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