Te Puia in shock at closure news
THE shock closure of an East Coast school has left the community feeling like their township is being shut down.

Te Puia Springs School received a letter from Education Minister Hekia Parata last month to say the process of closure had begun.

Reasons for the closure, expected at the end of the year, are the declining school roll and earthquake-prone buildings.

Neighbouring Waipiro Bay School, which has a roll of four, will also close and is going through the same process.

A representative from the Ministry of Education visited the Te Puia community last Monday with a decision already made and no other options were looked at, said mother Jamie Walsh.

Parents were told the school buildings would be demolished.

The school’s roll of 12 would either be home-schooled or sent out of the district.

“It just felt that whatever we said, it was no to everything.”

There are other buildings that could be used and 16 children at the kohanga reo are waiting to be enrolled, she said.

Closest schools are at least 10 kilometres away — the options are Makarika, Hiruharama or Tokomaru Bay

Board of Trustees chairwoman Francine Gilvray said Te Puia Springs School was more than 100 years old and an icon.

The school community was strongly opposed to the Minister closing it, she said.

“We are thankful that our school’s reputation and mana remain intact, as the closure is not based on student achievement, performance, governance or finances.”

The children themselves don’t want to go either.

If there was one thing 10-year-old student Hariata Ngamoki would ask the Prime Minister if she could, it would be, “Why are you shutting our school down? What have we ever done to you?”

It is the 10th school she has been to and the thought of having to start another new school brings tears to her eyes.

“If they want to shut down the school, then we won’t know each other any more.”

The students are like one big family and there are no bullies like at other schools she had been to, she says.

Parent John Awarau said the closure was in a long line of other issues for the community.

Some of the services at Te Puia Springs Hospital were going to be shut down and council services to the area had also declined, he said.

One mother said it was about money and earthquake risk was just an excuse.

The earthquake report was not made available to the parents.

Grandmother Hine Tamati has one mokopuna at the school.

“Instead of putting our kids’ needs and education first, it sounds to me like they’re putting money first,” she said.

Mother Rachael Bellamy said she would home-school her son rather than send him out of the district.

Joanne Poi’s nine-year-old grandson Ajeandi started at the beginning of the year and has thrived in his new environment — finally getting the one-on- one attention he needs, she says.

About half the students at the school live with their grandparents so they can attend the close-knit rural school.

Two grandmothers work at the hospital next door — closure of the school would change everything and break up the community, said one.

Labour MP Moana Mackey says it is always emotional when a school closes.

“Especially in a rural area, because the school is often a hub for the community. It is where the families can gather and where events are held. It is a devastating blow for the community. All options should be looked at to try to assist the school before closure is considered.”

END OF AN ERA: The Ministry of Education has swung the axe on rural schools, with Te Puia Springs and Waipiro Bay to close at the end of the year. Te Puia parents do not accept the reasons given to them by Education Minister Hekia Parata — a declining roll and single-storey classrooms earthquake-prone. Picture by Paul Rickard.
Comments
Betty Mauheni
05:08 p.m. Tuesday, Aug 28, 2012
AS ALWAYS! THIS IS ALL ABOUT $$$$ NOT ABOUT THE FUTURE FOR OUR TAMARIKI- MOKOPUNA.... HEKIA PARATA! MAYBE YOU SHOULD EDUCATE YOURSELF! AND THINK ABOUT THE NEEDS! FOR OUR FUTURE TAMARIKI!... LEAVE THESE FAMILIES ALONE!...YOU SHOULD FEEL ASHAMED! YOU ARE NOT EVEN THINKING ABOUT WHAT IS THE BEST EDUCATION AND WELL-BEING FOR THE WHANAU WHO CHOSE TO BRING THEIR TAMARIKI UP IN OUR BEAUTIFUL EAST COAST SCHOOLS
Peter Jones
05:13 p.m. Tuesday, Aug 28, 2012
The hospital has been there for years. The school has been there for years. An ideological change from government should not be able to slash these services with the stroke of a pen.
Nothing has changed in Te Puia. The change has occurred many miles away.
The bottom line is: "They don't care about you, At all . . . At all . . . At all."
Can't Hekia see that she is being used?
Tom Wilkie
06:08 p.m. Tuesday, Aug 28, 2012
Time to move forward and send the children to Tokomaru Bay where I believe the new principal is working wonders.
Good for the tamariki, as they will get more modern facilities and a free bus ride.
Tash
10:44 p.m. Tuesday, Aug 28, 2012
Wow this is so sad! I attended this kura from 1979 till 1984 when I moved on to Ngata Memorial College in Ruatorea. When I attended this kura there was a roll of around 130 and I remember more prefabs being ordered in to cater for the tamariki.
I feel sorry for the whanau that are left in places like Te Puia Springs and Waipiro Bay as there is no longer the employers of the late 1970s and early '80s, like the Ministry of Works and GDC - as well as the biggest employer the hospital.
Ka aroha for the people of our little communities! I wouldn't change a thing about how or where I grew up . . . what a very sad day to read this terrible news :(
julie
01:40 p.m. Wednesday, Aug 29, 2012
OK, is it coincidence that Hekia Parata has been involved in two different ministerial positions that have been involved in delivering bad news to the Coast?
Is National using her connections to the area to help soften the blows and maintain a relationship, while undermining the Coast's infrustructure? This smacks of political manipulation.
Lynne
03:32 p.m. Wednesday, Aug 29, 2012
Come on people. It is time to move forward, not backwards or stagnate. Four students at one school, 12 at another is not ecomonic by anyone's maths. Parents should be grateful that a move to a better-equipped school will help the young students to a better education -- and perhaps a better understanding about what education means for their future.

rangi rangiuaia
04:23 p.m. Wednesday, Aug 29, 2012
Yes, Lynne, let all parents be grateful that National seems hellbent on closing schools. Never mind the dislocation, the loss of social connectivity, and community assets. Honey, you sound like a bean counter. Economics 101 has no bearing on this situation. Try these on; most expensive petrol, supermarkets, electricity, utilities - figure these into your equations?
Sonia Clark
12:13 a.m. Friday, Aug 31, 2012
Well said Rangi. It will be a sad day if the school is to close. I attended this school, my children and grandchildren also went there.
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