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Parents launch fight to save Waterton J&I School

Wakefield schools face closure

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Published Date:
23 January 2009
A FIGHT to save a village school began this week after the council finally revealed radical plans to tackle falling pupil numbers.
Council chiefs are set to give the green light to consultation on the future of 15 of the district's schools when they meet next week, with options including closure and amalgamation.

Waterton J&I School in Lupset is among the schools listed for closure in a cabinet report titled Our Children, Our Future: Building Aspiration and Ambition in Wakefield.

What do you think? Have your say in the comments section below this story.
The news has devastated local residents who say they will not give it up without a fight.

Angry parents and children gathered at the Waterton Road school's gates in droves on Wednesday to protest.

They have launched a Facebook campaign and will present a petition of more than 1,000 names to council chiefs next week.

Mum of four, Katrina Fawcett was one of the organisers. The 36-year-old, of Haselden Road, said: "It is a fantastic school with amazing staff and it cannot be allowed to close."

Fellow organiser Dawn Bradley, 32, said: "This school has served generations. It is more than just a school, it is part of the community."

The cabinet report said the school was only judged to be performing satisfactorily by Ofsted inspectors because of weaknesses in past provision, and that the building needed more than £1m spending on it.

But campaigners say the school is worth it and that the headteacher has done a brilliant job turning things around.

Sally Kincaid, Wakefield NUT secretary, said any campaign against the closures has the union's backing. She said: "The falling birth rate should be a chance to reduce class sizes and make a real difference to the education of our children.

"The schools being threatened with closure support some of the most vulnerable children who could get engulfed in larger schools."

The nearest school is Snapethorpe Primary and it is thought pupils will attend there.

There are also plans to merge Clifton Infant School and St Peter's Junior School in Horbury, which are both in need of modernisation and repair.

The report said: "The schools are a considerable distance apart, which creates difficulties for parents with children at both schools.

"Both governing bodies are supportive of an amalgamation and have approached the local authority suggesting this."

Further schools will be identified for consultation in the future.

Here's how we broke the news < /em>of the decision to close the school.

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  • Last Updated: 23 January 2009 9:57 AM
  • Source: Wakefield Express City
  • Location: Wakefield
 
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Matt Grainger,

Wakefield 27/01/2009 12:21:37
I really can not see the problem. This article fails to mention that the nearby school, Snapethorpe Primary, is literally over the road from Waterton! Why two schools were built next door to each other in the first place i do not know. Plus most staff from Waterton will be redeployed to Snapethorpe anyway - they need just as many teachers.
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linda & family,

wakefield 05/02/2009 23:06:27
The problem is Waterton has 266 children and Snapethorpe do not have the school places for them !
some families will have to send children to more than one school.
The children at Snapethorpe should not be made to have large class sizes, only a a few staff would be redeployed Snapethorpe.
A large part of Snapethorpe was a middle school and children went from Waterton j&i to the middle school then on to high school.
in the report to cabinet it quotes a 3 year old ofsted report, Waterton is due ofsted any time soon. the report says the school has a deficit that is wrong too. The building should have been maintained too. The report to cabinet is on out of date and incorrect information and a guess on the birth rate. Also there would be a possibility if Waterton was closed a new build of family houses could be built on the land and more children !
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