Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeGazette‘Thirdworld’ classrooms

‘Thirdworld’ classrooms

By Paul Dunlop
GARFIELD children are being taught in “thirdworld” classrooms, frustrated parents and councillors say.
Garfield Primary School Council and Cardinia Shire representatives are calling on the State Government to help fix escalating maintenance problems at the 120yearold facility.
School council president Heather Van Wel said many of the school classrooms were almost falling apart.
Roof leaks, peeling paint, rotting carpet and cracking walls are among a litany of problems.
Mrs Van Wel said the school was given just $693 for maintenance in the latest round of funding allocations.
“It’s just not good enough,” she said.
“Students and teachers are having to put up with extremely primitive conditions to work and be taught in – they deserve a lot better.”
Cardinia Shire councillors Bill Pearson and Doug Hamilton threw their support behind the school’s bid for State Government funding.
Cr Pearson said the Garfield community was growing but education facilities were not keeping pace. The school’s rundown condition was not good enough, he said.
“There is one permanent classroom in the old school building and the rest are portables,” he said.
“Bits and pieces have been tacked on, there’s rot everywhere.
“You can smell the mustiness and damp in the classrooms. It’s thirdworld.”
Cr Pearson said the school not only needed funding but also a development plan to plot is growth into the future.
Garfield Primary School, which celebrated its centenary in 1986, has more than 120 enrolments this year and that number is already expected to rise in 2007.
Parents undertake working bees to help keep the school neat and tidy, but Mrs Van Wel said structural problems were taking their toll.
“It’s a lovely school but it needs maintenance. The gym is a tin shed that gets boiling hot in summer and freezing cold in winter,” she said.
“The staff are excellent and the children are doing really well but the condition of the school is very frustrating.”
A State Government spokeswoman said an indepth audit had just been completed for every school across the state.
“The Bracks Government has been rebuilding the education system, it is a high priority,” she said.
“In May’s Budget, the Bracks Government allocated an additional $50 million from the Building Tomorrow’s Schools Today fund for school maintenance for all government schools.
“Since 1999 we have invested a massive $6.3 billion in education and training, including $400 million in school maintenance and $1.65 billion on school capital works.
“Schools are allocated $34 million annually for maintenance.”

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

More News

Community hall proposed for Devon Meadows’ green wedge

A proposal to build a community hall in Devon Meadows’ green wedge is currently under consideration by the City of Casey. The proposal is the...

Bestselling Author Candice Fox, P.P Pomare to visit Connected Libraries

Book lovers will have the chance to meet some of Australia’s most acclaimed writers when two author events come to Bunjil Place Library in...

Casey school-based sexual offences fall, yet outpace neighbouring LGAs

Occurrences of sexual offences on Casey school campuses have fallen over the past year; but the municipality’s figures remain well above neighbouring areas. According to...

How is school-based crime comparable across Casey, Greater Dandenong and Cardinia?

Casey has come out on top for the number of reported crimes occurring on school campuses, according to data from the Crime Statistics Agency...

Probus Club of Pakenham East marks 50 Years with colourful celebration

Members of the Probus Club of Pakenham East started the month on a high note, celebrating 50 years of Probus in the Pacific by...

Nominate a legendary local volunteer for the 2026 Stan Henwood Award

Nominations are now open for Cardinia Shire Council’s annual volunteer award, which shines a light on locals who dedicate their time towards improving and...

Local youth make a big impact on Clean Up Australia Day

Participants from Live 2 Achieve, a local disability day program dedicated to helping young people build life skills and independence, have once again rolled...

Weekend crime crackdown leads to multiple arrests

Five people across Melbourne were arrested as part of Operation Advance last weekend — including two men from Cranbourne. The two men, both aged...

Three men charged after alleged crime spree in Melbourne’s south

Southern Metro Region Crime Squad detectives have charged three men following an extensive investigation into a series of incidents across Melbourne between 23 February...

Police hunt person of interest

Cardinia Crime Investigation Unit detectives are appealing for public assistance to identify a man following a suspicious fire in Beaconsfield on 26 February. It is...