NEW PLAN
Following the hugely popular
jailing and fining of parents whos
children play truant legislation, the
government is considering more radical
legislation to improve education by jailing and
fining the parents of children who dont get
A grades. Parents will be fined per subject
according to the grade achieved starting at £25
for B grade rising to £1000 for an F or 3 months
in prison. Funds raised by this scheme will not
be re-invested in the education system but
instead they will be used to fund a new prison
building program. |
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£150M SCHOOLS PLAN
Up to £150m could be invested in rebuilding and
refurbishing all of Derby's secondary schools over the
next few years. Eleven of the city's secondary schools
will have money spent on them, with the likelihood that
at least three could be totally rebuilt or even resited.
The city council has been asked to come up with a
shopping list for the Government and is in the early
stages of consulting with schools, architects and
surveyors. If the list is given the green light, it will
be the biggest investment in schools ever seen in the
city and comes on top of a £44m private finance project
to rebuild five city schools, which is already under way.
The £44m initiative already includes the complete
rebuilding of two city secondaries - High View School, in
Breadsall Hilltop, and Merrill College, in Shelton Lock.
The latest initiative, which could be worth up to £150m
but is expected to be nearer £100m, could also be
carried out using private finance money, where a
contractor carries out the work and then the city council
leases back the buildings, but the Government has yet to
make that clear. The Government's Building Schools for
the Future project aims to provide 21st-century
facilities for every secondary pupil in the country over
the 10 to 15 years from 2005.
All schools will feature on the list to some degree, with
Lees Brook Community Sports College, in Chaddesden, a
definite for a complete £20m rebuild. The school, in
Morley Road, has been repeatedly criticised by Government
inspectors for its poor state and lack of facilities. It
is also possible that Noel-Baker Community School, in
Bracknell Drive, Alvaston; Littleover Community School,
in Pastures Hill; and Bemrose Community School, in
Uttoxeter New Road, could be rebuilt. Secondary provision
at special schools and the Royal School for the Deaf, in
Ashbourne Road, will also be eligible for inclusion in
the shopping list.
Councillors have approved £156,833 worth of
improvement work at four schools. A total of £145,441
will come from the council's modernisation programme and
the rest must be found by the schools themselves.
Cavendish Close Infant School, in Wood Road, Chaddesden
will receive £55,220 towards the £60,000 cost of a new
heating system after a burst pipe in the under-floor
heating in the hall area disrupted heating supplies to
the rest of the school. The project, which includes the
installation of floor-standing heaters, is intended to
bypass the existing pipes.
The other building projects are at Pear Tree Junior
School, in Pear Tree Street, where timber in the roof has
dry rot and needs to be propped on health and safety
grounds at a cost of £30,000, ahead of repair work to
the ceilings. At Reigate Primary School, in Reigate
Drive, Mackworth, £18,513 is to be spent replacing a
waste drainage system following the collapse of a sewer.
And a total of £48,320 is being spent to renovate
glazing and purchase a temporary boiler for the pupil
referral unit based at the former Village Community
School site in Village Street, Normanton.
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