Dáil debates

Thursday, 1 November 2007

 

Schools Building Projects.

5:00 pm

Photo of Tony KilleenTony Killeen (Clare, Fianna Fail)

I am replying to this matter on behalf of the Minister for Education and Science, Deputy Hanafin. I thank Deputy Varadkar for raising this matter as it provides me with the opportunity to outline to the House the proactive approach being taken by the Department of Education and Science to provide up to 100,000 extra pupil places in rapidly developing areas throughout the country over the lifetime of the new national development plan.

Demand for additional school accommodation has escalated considerably in recent years due mainly to factors which include the growth in the school-going population in rapidly developing areas, including the impact of inward migration; the rapid expansion in teacher numbers, particularly in the area of special needs; the demands to cater for diversity through the recognition of new Gaelscoileanna and Educate Together schools; and population movements from older, more established urban areas to outer suburban areas.

Demographic increases in population are now the main driver of growth in demand for school accommodation. In the next five years alone, the Department is planning provision for a minimum increase in the national primary school-going population of up to 58,000 pupils.

The Department uses a number of sources of information to plan for the correct level of school accommodation. One of the most important sources is the local authority area development planning process. The Department is included among the prescribed authorities to which local authorities are statutorily obliged to send draft development plans or proposed variations to development plans. As a matter of course, there is ongoing liaison with local authorities to establish the location, scale and pace of any major proposed developments and their possible implications for school provision. Site reservations for new schools are made under this process.

A substantial amount of the time and the resources of the Department's school planning section are dedicated to ongoing contacts with the local authorities, especially in Dublin and within the Dublin commuter belt, to monitor housing development and to establish the timescale for the delivery of extra school accommodation. The Department is also represented on various bodies such as the Adamstown and Hansfield strategic development zone steering committees and the North Fringe Forum steering committee, among others, to obtain first-hand information on matters of relevance to school provision.

A practical example of positive output from these contacts is the arrangement entered into with Fingal County Council known as the Fingal school model agreement. Under this agreement, the Department and Fingal County Council have been working in partnership in recent years to acquire land for schools. While sites have already been acquired as a result of this co-operation, the focus at present is on finalising arrangements for the sites needed for the 2008 school year. The ability of the Department to open the required number of new schools in the Fingal area for next September is contingent on the lands in question being acquired very soon.

While the Minister for Education and Science is encouraged by the council's recent positive statement, she is also conscious that work on acquiring most of the sites has been ongoing for two years and she is anxious that their acquisition is finalised as soon as possible. To ensure the school buildings in question can be provided in record time, the Department has tendered for contractors to commence the construction of the schools off-site while planning permission is being sought. The system-built model of building schools off-site while planning permission is being sought has also already been used by the Department this year. It is planned to use it more widely as a means of delivering high quality school buildings in as little as four months.

The Government is aware of the school needs of the Fingal area and is doing all it can to deliver extra school places as quickly as possible. However, I wish to point out that while the scale of the work under way in Fingal is particularly newsworthy, the Department has in fact developed much closer working relations with local authorities all over the country in recent years and similar levels of activity are ongoing in all rapidly developing areas throughout the country.

Again, I thank the Deputy for raising this matter which has allowed me to illustrate both the extent of the work being carried out with local authorities and the importance which the Department of Education and Science attaches to relationships with them.

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