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Thursday, 2nd September 2010

Lancing mother fights school decision

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Published Date: 20 January 2010
A MOTHER is appealing against a decision which means her children will have to go to a primary school more than a mile from home.
Jaime Ellingham moved to Lancing just after Christmas.

She was told by West Sussex County Council to wait until two weeks before the end of the autumn term before applying to her first two choices of school – North Lancing and The Globe.

When she was allocated a place for her two children, though, it was at Seaside Primary, in Freshbrook Road, Lancing – more than a mile from her home in Manor Road.

Disappointment

"We went to North Lancing at the beginning of December and we did know they were full, but we were told not to apply until later in the term because they would not know if there was anyone leaving until then," said 33-year-old Miss Ellingham.

"I couldn't believe we couldn't get something closer than a 45-minute walk.

"I am extremely disappointed."

Miss Ellingham's daughter, 10-year-old Yasmin Smith, is in year five and her son, seven-year-old Casey Smith, is in year three.

She chose not to accept the place at Seaside and has been home schooling them until the appeal date, but she said she was disappointed not to get them into a school before Yasmin's birthday on Sunday (January 17).

Lovely

"We are missing that chance to get them integrated," she said.

"I just really wanted them to be schooled in their local community.

"We went to look around North Lancing and it was very similar to what they are used to.

"The head teacher gave us the best part of an hour of his time and it just seemed like a lovely school."

Reasonable

Miss Ellingham is due to find out the result of her appeal on January 28.

A spokesman for West Sussex County Council said: "When people move into an area, they contact admissions and complete an application form with their preferences.

"We would try to offer the highest preference where there is space.

"North Lancing Primary School usually fills at allocation and The Globe is also full in the year groups that Ms Ellingham has requested.

"The next nearest alternative school with space has been allocated, which is Seaside, which is within a reasonable distance from their home."

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  • Last Updated: 20 January 2010 3:46 PM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Worthing
 
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1

Keen-Observer,

worthing 21/01/2010 11:15:44
Is this a joke? How lazy can you be to say 1 mile is too far...Jeesh!
2

Gumbee,

Worthing 21/01/2010 11:44:48
I don't think 45 minutes to walk to school is unreasonable - I walk my daughter to and from school every day which is about 30 mins. walk and am sure an extra 15 mins. wouldn't make much of a difference.
3

TheLocal,

Worthing 21/01/2010 14:54:12
I'm probably over simplifying this, but as the average person walks at 3mph (and most faster than that), how on Earth can it take 45mins to cover 1 mile? It used to take me 45 minutes to walk to school and I lived 2.5 miles away!
4

TheLocal,

Worthing 21/01/2010 14:56:05
I'm possibly overly simplifying this, but as the average person walks at a speed of 3mph (and most faster) - how on Earth can it take 45 minutes to cover 1 mile?! It used to take me 45 minutes to walk to school and that was 2.5 miles!
5

Dave44,

Worthing 21/01/2010 16:44:55
Seriously....a mile in 45 minutes?? That's a walking pace of just over 1 mph - they must be unfit!!

No wonder this country's going down the pan when parents think a one mile walk to school is unreasonable. Grow a backbone!
6

Cherubman,

21/01/2010 17:17:52
Tosh, twaddle and faff. What utter bunkum. Regardless of the pathetic whining about having a bit of a walk to school, why on earth should somebody automatically get their first choice of school when they move into an area? Obviously she's going to be at the back of the queue, and rightly so.
7

Shocked11,

22/01/2010 08:14:41
I seriously cannot believe that this is a news story. A mile! That is nothing! And I agree with other people, it is certainly not a 45 minute walk. This is just the sort of shirking from exercise that is making our nation overweight and lazy.
8

Scrittipollitti,

Worthing 22/01/2010 11:49:46
Is this woman stupid? Of course she didn't get her first choice of school for her kids, she applied after the term had started. If she'd would have done a little background checking before she moved she would have found that a large percentage of the kids in Sussex don't get to go to the school they want due to the massive over subscription in our boroughs.
Also, what's the problem with walking more than 1 mile to school (I assume, as your article doesn't specify, that more than a mile, doesn't mean 10 miles, but more than 1 mile, less than 2??). Are your kids disabled in some way, (please accept my apologies if they are) if not, then what's the problem with a 15/20 min walk each way, each day (I don't understand your 45 mins reference unless you plan to walk on your hands for the whole distance).
Stop complaining, idiot woman, you want to live with us in Sussex, then you'll be treated with just as much contempt and bureaucratic nonsense from the local authorities as we all are. What makes you so special that you should get the placement you want when others, who have been sussex residents a even a short while longer, cannot.
9

The Paik,

Worthing 25/01/2010 00:54:44
This clearly shows how little Worthing Hearald has to report on. Get some real stories, not some snotty posh woman who is moaning that her kids will be going to school 'over a mile away'! If it was 10 miles then maybe but one mile takes 15 minutes at a very relaxed pace.

Get real you ridiculous woman and stop contacting the local paper about such a small idiotic story! Pathetic!
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