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CATCH 22
A family living in Kirk Langley were unable to send their son to Ecclesbourne School, although they are in the catchment area, because there were no places available. Instead, they enrolled him in Queen Elizabeth's School, Ashbourne. The council refused to help with bus fares as he was not attending the school in his catchment area!
       


£44M FOR FIVE NEW SCHOOLS


A £44m plan to create five new schools in Derby has finally got the go-ahead. A worrying shortfall of almost £8m, identified in January, in Derby City Council's outline business case for its private finance initiative is to be plugged by Whitehall. In 2001, the city council applied to the Government for approval to spend £36m building the new schools to replace inadequate buildings at seven schools in the city. This was given the provisional go-ahead.

But after council officials put the outline business case together, it was discovered that the project, due for completion by 2006, is likely to cost £43.8m. There were concerns that because the PFI is over-subscribed nationally, the Government might not give approval for the additional money. A PFI works by allowing local authorities to enter into a contract with a private company to build and maintain its schools.

The city council will pay leasing and maintenance costs to the contractor for 25 years and at the end of that period, the schools will revert to the ownership of the council. The news means that Merrill College, currently on two sites, will move on to one campus at Uppermoor Road, Allenton; a new 800-pupil school will be built on the site of High View School, St Andrew's View, Breadsall Estate; and a new 150-pupil school will be built to replace Sinfin Primary School in Sheridan Street.

Hardwick Infant in Dover Street, and Hardwick Junior School in Hastings Street, will be replaced by one 420-pupil primary school on the existing site. Wilmorton Community Primary School, London Road, and Southgate Infant School, Brighton Road, will be replaced by a single school on a new site. The council is consulting on three options for the new site which are Alvaston Park, London Road; open space at Crewton allotments; and land next to the recently opened link-road to Pride Park.

In addition to new schools, the project will be looking to include adult and community learning and sports and recreational activities. Construction of the schools will begin in summer, 2004, with completed schools being phased in from September, 2005. Michael Foote, city council director of corporate services, said, "We're pleased that we can now work with the schools to develop the final proposals. The final cost of the project will be known after it goes out to tender and bids are received later this year."


The location of a new £2.8m city primary school is set to be on green wedge land in Alvaston Park. The 350-place school will replace the existing Wilmorton Community Primary School, in London Road, and Southgate Infant School, in Brighton Road, by 2006. It is one of five new schools being built in the city under a £44m private finance initiative but the only one requiring a new location. Inadequate buildings at Wilmorton and falling pupil numbers at Southgate led to the decision to merge. A consultation exercise took place in March asking parents and residents which of three possible sites they preferred.

Choices included land to the west of Pride Parkway and open space off Crewton Street. A total of 153 replies were received and just over half identified Alvaston Park as their first choice, but Andrew Flack, city education director, said the Government could still have to make the final decision on the future planning application because the school would be built on green wedge land. Under the terms of the private finance agreement, the school will be leased from a private company by the city council for 25 years and then revert back to council ownership.

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