Answers wanted over ‘unrealistic and unaffordable’ classrooms
School classrooms are in the middle of a political stoush, with the Government asking for answers over billions of dollars for “bespoke” buildings that were unable to be delivered, while Labour is calling it a “desperate attempt” by National to pay for tax cuts.
The Government yesterday launched a ministerial Inquiry into what it called "unrealistic and unaffordable" plans for new school buildings, following a halt on more than 100 new classrooms and two teaching blocks earlier this month, due to cost, change of priority or change to roll growth.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon accused the previous Government of creating a situation "bordering on a crisis".
“When you're talking about several billion dollars and you're talking about 350 schools, we've got to find out what's happening. This review will address the previous government's failure to sufficiently implement the value for money approach
to school property, schools having expectations or building projects that are not able to be delivered on and significant cost blowouts.”
Education Minister Erica Stanford said there had been "a number of cost escalations and some schools expecting exciting, bespoke building projects that are not able to be delivered on".
She said the Ministry of Education had paused 20 building projects and told her there could be "up to 350 projects in
various stages, from design through to pre-construction, where expectations far exceeded what could be delivered".
Luxon said the ministry had been looking at cost effectiveness since September and it was not related to the expected cost cuts to the public service.
Labour leader Chris Hipkins called it a “desperate attempt to create an excuse to cut much-needed school building projects”. “National are choosing to prioritise tax cuts over classrooms for children.”
He said Labour upgraded every school in the country, built thousands of classrooms and added urgent temporary teaching spaces to accommodate more students.
“Cost escalations in the building sector have been a fact of life. National were told before the election they hadn’t allowed enough for cost escalations in their fiscal plan and chose to ignore that and claim tax cuts were affordable.
“They aren’t and now it looks like kids will be the latest to pay the price.”
Stanford said the inquiry, which would aim to report back in three months, would "address problems with the school property system where the scope of property works planned was unrealistic and unaffordable."
Asked how much the redesign would cost, Stanford said the “pipeline of projects the previous government were unable to deliver on runs into the billions”.
“The cost of redesigning and re-scoping is a lot less than delivering bespoke classrooms that are architecturally designed with fancy entrance ways.
“That is what's causing all of the bloat.“