Polish children put squeeze on schools 11 Grudzień 2007
MIGRANT workers may be putting "huge pressures"
on schools services with more than 100 pupils from overseas enrolling
in one Welsh county since April, it was claimed yesterday.
A
meeting in Cardiff also heard there were also concerns because many
people coming to Wales to work have no medical records or do not
register with a GP.
Council bosses from across Wales yesterday
discussed the implications of families and individuals from Poland and
other countries coming to Wales for work.
"Many authorities
are reporting the enrolment of children of migrant workers within local
schools," said a report for the Welsh Local Government Association.
"Due
to the transient nature of migrant workers, the increase in school
numbers is very difficult to plan for and is often unexpected.
"For example, since April 2006, 103 new pupils have registered in schools in Wrexham.
"A number of these children have special educational needs, some severe.
"Their
arrival has also placed huge pressures on specialist bilingual support
that is required due to some children having very little or no English
skills."
The 103 pupils who have joined Wrexham's school rolls
since April represent an enrolment rate of 155 over a whole year. That
equates to about 10% of the normal annual intake by Wrexham schools.
The
Welsh Assembly Government provides grants to cover some of the
education costs, but that money is reimbursed after councils have paid
out.
"Huge pressures are being placed on already overstretched
budgets. This issue is to be raised with the Minister for education and
lifelong learning."
The WLGA report added, "Health
professionals are raising a number of issues at the local level,
including the potential impact of migrant workers on public health.
"Often,
medical records are not accessible and as such it is difficult to
identify past health history, including vaccination and inoculation
rates against infectious diseases.
"It is also being
identified that registration rates with GPs are low and migrant workers
are more likely to access A&E [hospital accident and emergency
wards] for health issues."
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