Tarneit Senior College: Funding – Adjournment Speech delivered in Parliament 7 February 2013
Mr Pallas (Tarneit) — The matter I raise is for the Minister for Education, and the action that I seek is that the minister confirm that Tarneit Senior College will in fact be receiving the necessary funding to ensure completion of all building works up to and including stage 2. Tarneit Senior College was first planned and budgeted for under the previous government. Enrolment in the school has more than doubled since last year from 75 to nearly 200. It has not heard anything about the second stage of its building works, plans for the future are up in the air and it is expecting another 300 students to be enrolled next year. If the school does not get any funding, in 2014 it will have to operate out of relocatable classrooms. It has two unfinished science classrooms in the so-called ‘finished’ stage 1 buildings.
Reorganisation of the department saw regional funding slashed, and now the school is not even sure that it will get more buildings. In July last year the Werribee Star reported that Tarneit’s only secondary college resembled a construction site more than a place of learning, that the principal was being forced to choose between a basketball court or science rooms and that teachers were being forced to hold sports classes in the car park. The lack of facilities means that specific types of classes cannot be held and students will have to be bussed around to different schools.
The failure to attend to the needs of school buildings in Wyndham is a habit of this government. Last week was the second anniversary of the closure of the Glen Devon school and the long dance of indecision by the education minister over what will be done with the site has continued. Despite being offered detailed plans by the local council, the buildings have lain idle and dangerous for two years. Resources have been wasted, damaging property values of the local community. Buildings supposedly are being torn down sometime this month, but no more information is available. I make the point that these buildings were part of an operational school until December 2010, and not declared surplus to educational needs until sometime in 2011. But still no decision has been made about the future of the site.
Meanwhile the perilous state of educational facilities in Wyndham due to the ever-increasing population impact continues.
Wyndham will require 37 new schools before 2031, according to population projections from the council, with an average of 2 new schools to be built every year. There are 65 babies born every week or 9 every day. Parents have been putting their children on waiting lists for schools outside the local area, and they have no confidence that this government will do anything. Council reports that there is a serious backlog developing due to delays in the delivery of funding to build planned government schools. In 2012-13 the only building work for schools in Wyndham funded in the state budget was for the refurbishment of an existing school but there are no new schools.