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Donegal outrage at education cuts 31.10.08

TWO bus loads of teachers and parents from Donegal were among the crowd at a huge rally in Dublin held this week to protest against the Government's cuts in education.
The rally outside Leinster House was organised by the Irish National Teachers Organisation (INTO) who said the country's children should not have to suffer for the mistakes of the banks and those who profited from an over-inflated property industry.
Opposition to the education cutbacks is gathering momentum by the day both from parents, teachers and politicians.
Sinn Féin's education spokesperson Senator Pearse Doherty addressed Wednesday evening's rally and called on Education Minister Batt O'Keeffe to reverse his decision.
“Fianna Fáil has completely abandoned its commitment to reduce class sizes by 2010. Plan’s to increase class sizes, if implemented, will result in up to 1,200 primary school teachers being let go and the further overcrowding of classrooms," said Senator Doherty.
"Our education system is in disarray and rather than come up with a plan in Budget 2009 to reverse this situation the Government is intent on deepening the crisis. Shame on them. Education should be seen as a way out of the recession
Senator Pearse Doherty addressing the rally in Dublin.
rather than a victim of it," he added.
Meanwhile, North and West MEP Marian Harkin claimed the proposed cutbacks would place Ireland at the bottom of the EU league table for class sizes.
“As a former teacher at second level I am appalled at the failure of this Government to understand just how harmful their budget decisions will be to the educational development of all pupils but, in particular, those who require special assistance to equip them for increasingly challenging times ahead," said Ms Harkin.
"The decision in Budget 2009 to focus cutbacks on the young and the old revealed a disturbing thought process at the heart of a government which declined to tax alcohol but inflicted hugely damaging impositions on the education system.
“What this Government is doing is proposing a huge new burden of fundraising on hard pressed parents, many of whom are at their wits' end in paying for childcare and others facing an increasingly worrying employment situation."
Ms Harkin urged the Government to "scrap the current Budget" and produce one that people could "reasonably respond to, in a spirit of patriotism".
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