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Pupils may be hit by council budget cuts



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Published Date: 01 December 2008
TEACHERS fear budget cuts mean pupils will suffer as schools are forced to lose staff.
Already, some local authorities are announcing redundancies and cutting spending.

Glasgow City Council has said 78 teachers will have to go as a result of falling rolls. However, none of the job losses will be compulsory. Instead, voluntary redu
ndancies and natural wastage would achieve the necessary cuts.

The city council has identified £22 million of savings but still has £3 million to find.

Similarly, Aberdeen City Council needs to find £25 million of cuts to fill a financial black hole, but it has said teachers' jobs will not be cut.

Teachers unions have warned falling numbers mean the government's smaller class sizes target would not be met.

Ronnie Smith, the general secretary of Scotland's biggest teaching union, the EIS, said: "There is a gap opening up between what local authorities are doing on the ground and high level concordat promises on employing more teachers.

"A number of authorities such as Renfrewshire have decided to walk away from the government circular which says there should be a maximum of 20 in S1 and S2 maths and English.

"The issue is whether authorities are playing ball and, if not, what is the Scottish Government going to do about it?"

Ann Ballinger, the president of the Scottish Secondary Teachers' Association, said: "Teacher numbers are dropping in certain areas because of the current financial situation.

"In better financial circumstances, if schools had extra teachers they might have used them to reduce class sizes, but that is not happening now."







The full article contains 268 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 30 November 2008 10:13 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Duncan in Edinburgh,

01/12/2008 08:23:06
"There is a gap opening up between what local authorities are doing on the ground and high level concordat promises on employing more teachers."

Exactly as everyone with any nous said would happen when the "historic concordat" was signed. The SNP's great swindle train trundles on. Yes, it is the council's fault for signing up, but it is the rest of us who will suffer, and we'll remember who pulled this trick.
2

Tormod,

Auld Reekie 01/12/2008 10:54:07
Duncan be very careful about what a teaching union is saying and what is reported in a newspaper for example my local comic the Dunfermline Press carried a big article about those nasty SNP folk and more budget cuts as reported by the EIS.

However reading through the article a large financial problem for Fife council has been that teacher sick leave / cover is costing almost £1 million a year to the council. The council are having to find that extra cost from the education budget.

The EIS response was that there numbers for sickness wasn't as bad as others in the council hmm right!!

It's it just me or do you see there just might be a wee contradiction in what the union are saying because of sickness leave of there members the council has to find extra money that otherwise would be spent in schools a contradiction perhaps??

It was a trick right enough to get folk to sign up to the concordat, more resources and more freedom of movement. If a council decides not to commit the service level agreement, it's up to them to explain to it's citizens why it didn't.

I think it's called being treated as an adult.
3

ddmc,

01/12/2008 11:43:26
typical local authority reaction when facing cuts, drop a couple of stories to their press stools claiming front line services will be cut, in reality get rid of a couple of so called senior mgmt posts & balance the books that way, much more popular with the voters !
4

Hugh Roscombe,

01/12/2008 12:12:56
"Glasgow City Council has said 78 teachers will have to go as a result of falling rolls. "

... as has happened every time a school roll drops. This isn't news - it's pash.
5

Observer. 1,

Glasgow 01/12/2008 13:25:56
''the issue is whether authorities are playing ball, and if not, what is the Scottish government going to do about it''.

Nothing. Councils have been funded by the SG and it is up to them how they spend the money on the ground, subject to meeting audit and regulatory requirements.

GCC are making savings right across the board, it is hundreds of jobs they are shedding, not just 78 teaching posts.

That's what happens when the Treasury screws up the economy.
6

fife runner,

01/12/2008 14:21:49
#2 in Fife sick leave varies considerably from school to school. Eg Madras College in St Andrews saw a rise in days off when others saw a fall. Due to the indiscpline allowed to run at the school and increased asaults on staff
7

Poetess50,

01/12/2008 19:22:41
What difference does it make? IMHO, most pupils don't really give a d*** about their education!

 

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