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Last Updated: Wednesday, 28 January, 2004, 17:52 GMT
Heads back new �1.7m school
Protest sign
The fate of the schools has been in the balance since last May
The future of two mid Wales primary schools will be decided by councillors at a meeting on Thursday.

Llangedwyn school, with 48 pupils, could close if councillors chose an option to build an area school at Llanrhaeadr-ym-Mochnant to replace the current decaying Victorian building.

But if members choose the other option of only building a replacement school at Llanrhaeadr, which has 73 pupils, then Llangedwyn will remain open.

Head teachers of both schools support the "replacement" school option which would cost between �1.5 and �1.7m

It is not logical or right to close a thriving school which is viable on the assumption that its pupils will then fill another school
John Parkinson, head teacher

But building an area school at Llanrhaeadr for 150 pupils would cost �1.85m and mean pupils from Llangedwyn school would have to travel five miles further.

The schools were among a dozen in Powys threatened with closure after the local authority started a review of primary schools last May.

Welsh language

Nine of the schools were saved last November but a decision on the schools at Llanrhaeadr and Llangedwyn was deferred for more information.

Llangedwyn head teacher John Parkinson said: "The families of children attending this school will not send their children to the proposed new school at Llanrhaeadr.

"The catchment of Llangedwyn is predominantly to the east of Llanrhaeadr and parents will choose to send their children to schools closer to their homes rather than travel out of their way to Llanrhaeadr."

Mr Parkinson said his school was one of the few in the county that was oversubscribed.

School bus
Pupils from Llangedwyn would have to travel another five miles

"It is not logical or right to close a thriving school which is viable on the assumption that its pupils will then fill another school."

Rhodri Jones, head teacher of Llanrhaeadr, said incorporating pupils from Llangedwyn would be a mistake.

"The two schools have a different way of working because we have a strong Welsh language ethos and Llangedwyn has more English language provision," said Mr Jones.

"Whatever is decided on Thursday it is vitally important that a new school is built in Llanrhaeadr.

"Part of the building dates back to the Victorian era and there is water coming in through the roof."

Local county councillor Harry Hughes said: "I will be supporting the building of a replacement school for 90 pupils at Llanrhaeadr.

"Even though there are 73 children at the school at present only another 20 houses can be built in the village in the next decade.

"This, and the fact that we will see less children entering primary school nationwide over the next five years, means that this is the sensible option to go for."




SEE ALSO:
School budget cuts loom
06 Jan 04  |  Wales
D-day on rural schools closures
27 Nov 03  |  Wales
Rural schools win reprieve
03 Nov 03  |  Mid
Nine schools under threat
29 Oct 03  |  Mid


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