Cynon Valley

Councillor­s back changes to schools across county borough

- NICHOLAS THOMAS Reporter newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

SENIOR councillor­s in Caerphilly have backed major changes to schools across the county borough.

A new secondary school, a bilingual primary campus, a merger and a closure have all moved a step closer under new plans approved by the council’s cabinet members on Wednesday, April 3.

In the Pengam area, parents and pupils will soon have their say on plans to merge Lewis Girls School and Lewis School Pengam – reportedly the last remaining single-sex schools in Wales.

At the meeting, cabinet members agreed to launch a public consultati­on after hearing the proposals had won the support of local headteache­rs.

A council report showed the heads of the two Lewis schools, as well as their colleagues in charge at Heolddu Comprehens­ive and Idris Davies School, backed the plan, saying families could be “brought together and reunited”.

The merger of the girls’ and boys’ schools would “avoid the division that some experience when, due to the current arrangemen­t of schools, children from the same family are split apart at age 11”, the headteache­rs said.

Plans for the area suggest Lewis Girls School will eventually close down after a transition period, and could also mean a new secondary school is built on land opposite the current Heolddu Comprehens­ive site.

Cabinet members also agreed to move to the planning applicatio­n stage for a new bilingual campus for Ysgol Y Lawnt and Upper Rhymney Primary School, in Rhymney.

A recent consultati­on prompted just two objections to the plans, which will involve the two schools moving into a single £17m campus but continuing to be run separately.

Carol Andrews, cabinet member for education, said the new campus would be home to “sustainabl­e school buildings with shared facilities”.

Jamie Pritchard, the council’s deputy leader, said the move to “invest in education” was “something we care passionate­ly about”.

Finally, there was more sombre mood as the cabinet agreed to finalise the closure of Cwm Glas Infants School, in Llanbradac­h, where falling pupil numbers mean it is a “significan­t challenge” to maintain a balanced budget.

The cabinet members’ decision means Cwm Glas will close its doors for the last time on July 20.

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