THEY MAKE ME SICK !
Villagers angered by plans to open new Sikh faith school
Posted: Wed, 13 Feb 2013
Local residents have reacted angrily to plans to open a new Sikh faith academy school in a Buckinghamshire village.
Concerns
centre on proposals from Slough Sikh Education Trust [SSET] to open a
new 840-pupil Secondary Academy in the village of Stoke Poges.
The proposed Khalsa Secondary Academy's admissions policy
states that up to 50% of the places will be allocated on the basis of
Sikh faith and all remaining places will be allocated to children of
other faiths or no faith.
However, local residents have argued that the
school's recruitment drive has focused exclusively on Sikh communities
in neighbouring Slough, Southall and Harrow and is therefore expected to
open with at least 90% of pupils from a Sikh background in the first
year's intake.
Local residents are concerned that the
village does not have the adequate infrastructure to deal with
additional traffic that will occur when pupils are bussed in from
surrounding areas.
Local parents have also raised
concerns that as the school will become the catchment school for the
South Bucks area, families who choose not to send their children to the
'faith' school will lose their paid-for home to school transport.
Nick
Kandola, chair of SSET, says his organisation looked at a number of
potential sites within Slough, but none were considered viable by
council planners or Trust members.
Stephen Evans,
campaigns manager at the National Secular Society, said: "One of the
problems with faith schools is that rather than attending their local
school, schoolchildren are increasingly being segregated by the
religious beliefs of their parents and then bussed around to the nearest
'faith' school that matches that belief.
"With
regard to this specific proposal, we are particularly concerned that
parents not wanting to educate their children at a school with a
distinctive Sikh ethos could be financially penalised by the local
authority by denying them assistance with home to school transport
costs.
This is yet another example of how the faith school system can
disadvantage the non-religious and those of other faiths."
More than 400 Stoke Poges residents attended a recent meeting in the village hall pledging to fight the plans.
A Facebook group set up to coordinate opposition to the new school now has over 950 members.
A public consultation concerning the proposal closes on Friday 15 February 2013.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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