DARREN CHEESEMAN COMMITTS TO "SOS PARENTS" AND TORQUAY SCHOOLS

Today I rise to make my contribution to Appropriation Bill (No. 3) 2009-2010 and Appropriation Bill (No. 4)

2010-201. I want to particularly focus my contribution on the whole issue of education, schools and preschool

funding in a part of my electorate, Torquay and the Surf Coast. This is about funding for the future of our country. It is about providing opportunities for our future citizens and providing a skills base for our economy.

The Surf Coast is typical of many electorates throughout Australia in that rapid population growth

has been taking place over the last decade or so. We need all levels of government to come together to provide

funding and policy development to ensure that we get the outcomes right not only in managing the growth but in

providing those educational opportunities for all citizens within that area.

 

I have particular pleasure in acknowledging a group of parents within my electorate, the Save Our Schools

group, which has been campaigning for the need for investment in Torquay, Jan Juc and Bellbrae to ensure that we

provide educational opportunities for our young ones who are the future of our nation.

 

It has become apparent to those communities, particularly those parents within Torquay,

Jan Juc and Bellbrae that their schools are at capacity or will reach capacity next year. Over the next three or four years, without

further investment in education for those students in Jan Juc, Torquay and Bellbrae, we will have a situation where perhaps 500 families will need to travel into Geelong, some 30 kilometres away, to place their kids in primary

education. This is particularly worrying.

 

 

Through the Building the Education Revolution, the Commonwealth made a very substantial investment into

those schools. The capacity of those schools to take additional students was dramatically increased through the

provision of new learning areas, new libraries and the like to cater for that growth. With such rapid population

growth taking place on the Surf Coast, more funding will be required.

 

The current capacity of the Torquay College, Bellbrae and St Therese Catholic School, is 1,566 students. That

is what those schools are designed to cater for. I believe the Torquay College is at absolute capacity at 840 students.

 

Bellbrae has a maximum capacity of 350 and State Therese has a maximum capacity of 450. If you add

those figures together, it is obvious that investment will be required in those schools.

 

As I said earlier, the ABS statistics on this are very enlightening. They predict the annual growth rate of primary

age kids to be about 5.9 per cent—that is, 5.9 per cent growth this year, 5.9 per cent growth on top of that

next year, and so on. You can very quickly see the challenge that our community needs to respond to.

 

The equation becomes more complex when you look at long day care and kindergarten. The reality is that those

kindergartens and long day centres are also at or very close to capacity, and again that is very worrying for many

parents. Many parents now have to travel into Geelong to access those kindergarten educational opportunities for

their three-year-olds. It is clear that again we need the three levels of government to come to the table and address

these very substantial growth challenges.

 

Over the last few years the Gillard government has been pumping an additional $210 million into improving

kindergarten services as a part of what is close to a billion-dollar COAG reform agenda. That $210 million should

be matched by the Victorian state government to ensure that we do give young people the opportunities they need,

particularly in areas of substantial population growth like we have seen on the Surf Coast.

 

In some instances that might require $200,000 or $300,000 to build an additional room onto the kindergarten to cater to that growth. That

might be about the extent of the funding that is required. But in other areas where there has been substantial population

growth over a significant period—and that population growth is going to continue into the foreseeable future—

we need to work in an innovative way to ensure that we do develop a children’s services hub type of model

where we bring together kindergartens, long day care, maternal health nurses and the like. Perhaps also the private

sector could be brought onto that one site.

 

Such sites would provide an integrated service for our communities. I know many here have contributed to the whole debate on growth corridors. As a federal member who has been engaged in these issues in my community for the last four years, I know it is true to say that we do need in those instances to come together, to bring the three levels of government together and to ensure that we do drive

good outcomes for our kids.

 

Growth corridors and areas like the Surf Coast very much need the three levels of

government working together. We have put $210 million on the table as a part of our COAG reform of kindergartens,

we have put hundreds of millions of dollars into each and every electorate across this nation through the

Building the Education Revolution—building new classrooms, new libraries, new learning spaces—and we need

the Victorian government now to match that investment to ensure that we do provide in these growth corridors

every opportunity for our young Australians.

 

As I mentioned earlier, the Torquay College community have come together and formed a community group

called the Save Our School group. They are a group of women, predominantly, who have the best interests of their

kids at heart. What they want to see is educational infrastructure capacity in Torquay dramatically increased over

the next two or three years to ensure that kids are not going to school and being jammed in like sardines, which is

very much where things are at the moment. They want certainty. They want the Victorian government to put on

the table, in very clear and practical ways, what its plans are to deliver that certainty. Importantly, they want to be consultated about that.

 

They want a new primary school to service that growth corridor. They want a new children’s services hub to ensure that three- and fouryear- olds can access kindergarten services and long day services.

 

These are critical issues to the Torquay Surf Coast community.

 

Further to that, I would also like to commend the work of the City of Greater Geelong, who have undertaken a

very innovative piece of work to look at their kindergarten services across their municipality. They have prioritised,

as one, two or three, every service. They have done so to determine what needs to take place to meet growth

within the zero to four age group, the kindergarten age group, within that community.

 

What they have said is that there are some areas where a lot of investment will be required. They have been very clear about that. They have

said that, in other areas, they will be able to meet demand through being flexible and creative and doing things

such as perhaps providing kindergarten services on Saturdays.

 

The nature of work has changed quite dramatically over the last 20 or 30 years and many parents now enjoy their weekends on a Monday and Tuesday. Perhaps the provision of kindergarten on a Saturday might be a flexible way to suit their lifestyles. There are areas where those

sorts of things will be required and there are areas where the provision of $200,000 or $300,000 to build an additional

space and engage an additional teacher will meet that demand.

 

I commit to working with the Save Our Schools community group. I commit to working for all parents across

the Surf Coast to ensure that we do provide adequate infrastructure for kindergarten and for schools. I think these

issues are very important and I look forward to working, over the years to come, to ensure that investment goes

into that very substantial growth corridor.

Volunteer

Are you able to help? We appreciate your support.

  • Host a neighbourhood event
  • Hold a street stall
  • Phone calling
  • Door knocking
  • Something else?

If you can help with any of these activities please let us know.

Your Rights At Work

Job security, a say in your workplace and mutual repsect are at the heart of Labor's new Fair Work Laws. Also see the ACTU campaign http://www.rightsatwork.com.au/

Nation Building

stimulusplan

Look what the Federal Government has done in your own backyard to grow jobs and support local communities. Visit the website below.

www.economicstimulusplan.gov.au

 

Fresh Ideas for Families

Darren-Cheeseman-Family

Julia Gillard is helping families with working arrangements, childcare, new kindergarten program and more.

http://www.deewr.gov.au/Earlychildhood/

 

©2009 Darren Cheeseman MP. Design by Flared Vision Design. Web Development by JoomStore.
Home | Sitemap | Privacy Policy and Terms of Usage | Federal ALP website