The Herald (Zimbabwe)

BCC to hand over schools to parents

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THE Bulawayo City Council ( BCC) has resolved to hand over its 30 schools to parents in a bid to “cut costs”.

According to the latest council report, the local authority will hand over 29 primary schools and one secondary school to their respective school developmen­t committees ( SDCs).

The committees will have the autonomy to collect fees and levies, make crucial decisions that include employing and paying their respective staff members.

Total enrolment at all the 30 schools stands at 39 341. The move, according to the report, was necessitat­ed by the Government’s insistence that BCC maintains a 70:30 percent service delivery to salaries ratio.

With the handing over of the schools, the local authority thus gets rid of all the employees working at the respective schools including the education officer post, responsibl­e for monitoring schools and collecting fees on behalf of council.

“With the situation as it is now, the management thought it would be prudent for council to form school devel- opment committees in its schools who would have some autonomy and run the schools on behalf of council. This, it is hoped, may lessen the financial burden on council. “In effect, this means council will cede the collection of all fees to the school developmen­t committees and let the schools employ their own personnel.

The current non-teaching staff at schools are as follows; bursar (responsibl­e for three schools each), one senior clerical assistant per school, one caretaker, one messenger and two grounds staff per school,” reads part of the report.

Without highlighti­ng the saving to be achieved through the decision, the local authority further noted that by handing over the schools to SDCs, this could ensure better collection of fees.

It noted that with the current set-up most children left their respective primary schools still owing fees. A few months ago, the local authority reported that it was owed over $2 million in unpaid school fees. It said Government had for over a year also struggled to pay fees for children under the Basic Education Assistance Module scheme.

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