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Inner Sydney school shortage to be relieved by $60 million investment

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Sydney needs more schools

Over the next ten years demand for schools across Sydney is almost going to double.

PT2M4S 620 349

The NSW Department of Education will invest more than $60 million into new inner Sydney schools in a bid to curb a chronic shortage of school places.

On Wednesday, NSW Education Minister Adrian Piccoli announced a new kindergarten to Year 12 school in Alexandria with capacity for 2200 students.

Minister for Education Adrian Piccoli at Alexandria Park Community School.

Minister for Education Adrian Piccoli at Alexandria Park Community School. Photo: Nick Moir

The initiative will barely cover the expected enrolment surge that will come with the nearby Green Square development, with 60,000 residents swarming into the area over the next decade.

At the same time, the government will move students out of Cleveland Street Intensive English High school onto the existing Alexandria Park senior campus.

The shift means that construction can finally begin on the 1500-student, high-rise high school in the middle of the Sydney CBD, as enrolments at nearby Bourke, Crown and Fort Street Public Primary schools swell with the children of inner Sydney residents.

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"It is a significant challenge," said Mr Piccoli. "Land in the inner city is always a challenge and that means putting more students onto sites."

The decision comes after Fairfax Media revealed an $11 billion funding shortfall that has compounded the department's metropolitan enrolment crisis.

In total, the NSW school system will be required to cope with an extra 225,000 students by 2031, 165,000 of whom will be in the public system, with 90 per cent of that increase in Sydney.

Schools across the city are already being forced to split lunch times, ban running in playgrounds and increasingly rely on demountables in order to deal with enrolment surges as well-off inner-city parents increasingly look to the public system.

"There is such strong demand for public education because of the confidence people have in the education system," Mr Piccoli said.

Labor's education spokesman, Jihad Dib, said the $60 million commitment was a start but just the tip of the iceberg when it came to new school places.

"For [the government] to be championing itself as the public school saviour frankly rings hollow," he said.

While the state struggles to catch up with enrolments, its future school finances took a multibillion-dollar hit in the federal budget on Tuesday.

The Commonwealth only committed to a quarter of the recommended Gonski funding, through a $1.2 billion increase in education funding to all the states and territories.

The move has frustrated NSW Premier Mike Baird, NSW Treasurer Gladys Berejiklian and Mr Piccoli, who have been lobbying their Canberra Coalition colleagues for the past two years to honour the needs-based Gonski agreement.

"We have been arguing about this for a long time," said Mr Piccoli.

"If the Coalition wins the federal election, I will continue to argue with the Commonwealth, and if their budget position improves, we will be going back to them and saying we want [the recommended funding].

"Gonski is fairness. It is about every student having exactly the same opportunity in life when at school. You don't choose who your parents are, you don't choose if your parents are drug addicts or if they are lawyers and doctors," the Education Minister said.

"As a society we have an opportunity to level that playing field at school. That is what Gonski is all about".

Cleveland Street High School is scheduled to open in 2020, while the Alexandria Park campus is due to be completed by 2022.

40 comments so far

  • Most people with school age children live in the outer suburbs. Why the concentration in the inner city?

    Commenter
    John Casper
    Date and time
    May 04, 2016, 3:49PM
    • To capture the international market. The only families rich enough to buy in the capital cities!

      Commenter
      Pluto
      Location
      Melbourne
      Date and time
      May 04, 2016, 4:15PM
    • This is a marketing strategy for new apartments. 2200 school places for 60,000 new apartments in alexandria. What a joke! Also, how do we know the govt won't give money more for private schools as usual?

      Commenter
      Stop selling Australia
      Date and time
      May 04, 2016, 4:48PM
    • Crown and Bourke St enrolments have surged dramatically in the last 5 years or so. The real problem is the fact of selective high schools at Moore Park. If they opened up Sydney Girls and Boys High enrolments to local kids, irrespective of how they did in an entrance exam, and those schools became comprehensive high schools serving their local communities, that would have to help. They could still have selective streams for kids outside the catchment area.

      Commenter
      Bemused
      Location
      Clovelly
      Date and time
      May 04, 2016, 4:49PM
    • Not according to the information in the article,, and not according to my experience of living in the inner suburbs for 20 years. Our local school is busting at the seams

      Commenter
      Roger
      Date and time
      May 04, 2016, 4:52PM
    • Because I guess more people are rejecting the suburban dream in favour of a more cosmopolitan existence. It's not rocket science. They would rather avoid having to endure traffic congestion and long rail commutes. Gov is there to support all citizens.

      Commenter
      JFK
      Date and time
      May 04, 2016, 4:56PM
    • Inner city lefties have all their money locked up in their multi million dollar homes.

      Hence they are going public.

      Commenter
      Regh
      Date and time
      May 04, 2016, 4:59PM
    • Get rid of LNP and Labor. They have comprehensively failed us.

      Commenter
      JohnBB
      Date and time
      May 04, 2016, 5:02PM
    • Baird wants another one million consumers packed into Sydney over the next few years.

      Commenter
      JohnBB
      Date and time
      May 04, 2016, 5:05PM
    • Hello.... my daughter describes her inner city suburb as Marriageville.

      The report on school education demographic as reported in The Australian is describing the flight/shift from independent compulsory school education back to the public school. More evident from the professional household.... kinda like those who can buy a home in inner Sydney who are preferring to choose secular public school... a less pronounced shift by the middle classes... and the trade employed and the greenfield estate remains the predominant buyer of private school education. Gonski anyone?

      Now I do wish to personally thank the scandal sheets which has worked themselves into a lather over a decade crying foul the "leftists" "the loonie beliefs of equality" "and rainbow painted school yards" "sustainable school harvesting and tofu burgers" their bellowing their standard of cultural values and attempts at "naming and shaming school principles in public school" bravo bravo job well done. Gold star for the tabloids

      Commenter
      dipaha
      Date and time
      May 04, 2016, 5:05PM

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