A Christchurch principal claims the Ministry of Education is threatening to withhold new classrooms, if his school doesn鈥檛 adopt an enrolment zone.
Rowley School, which teaches year 1-8 students, is among hundreds of schools across the country being asked to introduce zoning to cope with rapid roll growth.
New Ministry of Education data shows 1307 schools have a scheme this year - 136% more than the 552 two decades ago.
In Canterbury and Auckland, the number of schools without zones have dropped by about a third in five years.
Rowley Principal Graeme Norman said the Ministry wants a zone because the school鈥檚 roll has jumped from 100 students five years ago to about 250 now.
鈥淭hey say you have to have a zone or you won鈥檛 get new buildings for the population growth, so they say that鈥檚 not a threat, but to me, that sounds like a threat,鈥 he said.
The Ministry rejects the claim.
Acting South leader Andrea Williams said before funding new classrooms, the Ministry must first look non-property solutions to manage or mitigate overcrowding.
鈥淚mplementing an enrolment scheme is one such measure,鈥 she said.
鈥淭here is significant residential development underway and planned within the proposed enrolment home zone. The Ministry will continue to monitor growth in the area to determine when additional classroom capacity may be needed to meet the needs of residents within the home zone,鈥 she said.
Consultation has now closed on the Ministry鈥檚 proposed zone scheme for Rowley, with feedback being reviewed by the board of trustees.
The zone is proposed to begin from January next year.
Norman said the process felt pointless.
鈥淓ven the email from the Ministry requesting the meeting was, oh, we need to speed this up because our timeline is very tight,鈥 he said.
鈥淪o that would indicate to me that they still are really focused that they鈥檙e going to put a zone in. So why the consultation? Is it just a tick a box?鈥
Ministry of Education Operations and Integration Leader, Sean Teddy said zones prevent overcrowding and guarantee local students a place.
鈥淲e analyse and assess the need for enrolment schemes across the motu to help manage overcrowding, ensuring local students can attend schools in their area,鈥 he said.
OneRoof reports some families are paying up to $800,000 for in-demand school zones.
Teddy said there鈥檚 options for students who do not want to attend the only school they are zoned for.
鈥淭hey include applying to an out-of-zone school, state integrated school, private school or charter school, or seeking support from the Ministry of Education for a directed enrolment, or exploring alternative education providers like activity centres or home education.鈥
Norman said while zoning has merit, it shouldn鈥檛 limit choice.
鈥淚 use the analogy, we have a number of different restaurants, some restaurants I really enjoy going to. Others don鈥檛 like that restaurant, but they prefer something else.鈥
鈥淪o we鈥檝e got options, but we take the options away from our children, even though we鈥檙e forcing them to go to school.鈥
Jaime Cunningham is a Christchurch-based reporter with a focus on education, social issues and general news. She joined 九一星空无限talk ZB in 2023 after working as a sports reporter at the Christchurch Star.
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