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McEntee: Difficult to find special class places in Dublin

Helen McEntee said that 399 special classes have been sanctioned for the next school year
Helen McEntee said that 399 special classes have been sanctioned for the next school year

Minister for Education Helen McEntee has said there have been difficulties finding a place in a special class for some children in Dublin.

Ms McEntee took questions in the Dáil about the provision of classes for children with additional educational needs.

She said that 399 special classes (287 primary, 112 post-primary) have been sanctioned for the next school year - bringing to 3700 the number of special classes throughout the country.

Just under 3,300 children have been identified by parents to the Department of Education since mid-February, she said.

Close to 4,000 places are being made available nationwide.

The minister told Sinn Féin's Education Spokesperson Darren O'Rourke that the vast majority of special classes had opened for enrollment.

"Schools have now been informed of their SNA allocations for September," she said.

She said there will be over 23,000 SNAs this September, the highest number.

Mr O’Rourke said that he wanted to drill down into the headline figures, saying they had been iterated for some time.

He asked about children who do not yet have an appropriate school place for September and whether that figure was available today.

Mr O’Rourke said that "last year we were notified at the start of September that 126 children didn’t have a place."

He pointed out that at a protest last Saturday, it was said that 60 children still didn’t have a place.

Ms McEntee said that she had been meeting the National Council for Special Education and that, as of yesterday, over 92% of children had been allocated a place.

She said that outside Dublin, many counties had either allocated a place or had "pathways to a place."

"The challenge is with Dublin", the minister said.

Schools were working hard, she added, but admitted that the need was greater than it ever had been before.

"Where schools had been sanctioned and haven’t opened, they’re being engaged with."

Mr O’Rourke said he hoped the minister would keep the Dáil updated on figures.

He also mentioned four children in Sligo, five in Kerry, and some in other areas who had yet to get a place.

"Any child that’s known to the NCSE, be it in Kerry or anywhere else, as far as I’m concerned, there are places available ... the biggest challenge is in Dublin."