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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Nick Statham

Anger and frustration as 'desperately needed' new special needs school is delayed

The opening of a ‘desperately needed’ new £17m special school has been delayed. Pear Tree Academy is set to provide places for up to 133 secondary pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND), including those with autism. It will be based at the derelict Orrishmere Primary School site, in Cheadle Hulme, which has become a magnet for anti-social behaviour over recent years.

Councillors passed the plans last October and were delighted that children would benefit from being educated closer to home, while the authority would also save thousands by not having to shell out on external placements. The Worcester Road school - a modular building to be built ‘off-site’ - was set to open this year.

But there has now been a delay after the Department for Education decided to change contractor, meaning it has now been pencilled in for 2024-25. Coun David Meller, who represents Cheadle Hulme North, says he is furious over the setback.

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“This delay is appalling news not just for local residents, who have to put up with the derelict Orrishmere Primary site and the trouble it can attract, but for the children in Stockport who desperately need this school,” he told the Local Democracy Reporting Service.

"We have a chronic shortage of specialist SEND places in Stockport, with some of our most vulnerable children having to travel out of the borough to access the education they need. Not only is this morally wrong, but it's costing the council a huge sum of money."

GGI of proposed Pear Tree Academy, Cheadle Hulme, Stockport (Ellis Williams Architects.)

It is understood the school will now be built to higher environmental standards, as these have been improved since the original design. But that is scant consolation to Coun Meller.

"The DfE need to get this sorted - now,” he said. “This represents a failure at government level and is letting Stockport's most vulnerable children down, coupled with the community as a whole."

The DfE is now believed to be working closely with the council and Prospere Learning Trust towards opening the school in the 2024/25 academic year. Coun Wendy Meikle, cabinet member for children, families and education, says she is ‘fully in support getting this school up and running’

"The director [of education] has contacted the DfE on a regular basis and we are doing what we can to get it finished,” she added. “We want this school finished as soon as possible for our young people so they don’t have to travel out of the borough.”

The purpose-built school will also include habitat areas, sensory gardens and a Multi Use Games Area’. The Department for Education provided some information to the local democracy service but did not comment.

Read the latest What's On headlines here.

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