Labour education spokesperson Trevor Mallard has appealed to Auckland secondary schools not to follow Auckland Grammar
School's poor example of stretching the school enrolment law.
"The law will be tightened up by Labour in government to ensure that schools which have enrolment schemes must include a
home zone," Trevor Mallard said.
"The current trouble which Auckland Grammar is spearheading proves Labour's long-held argument that changes made by the
National Government to the legislation were not properly drafted and fell well short of guaranteeing children access to
their neighbourhood schools.
"But at the time, National Ministers were more concerned with satisfying the rather flaky demands of Christine Fletcher
than developing fair legislation to give children right of access to neighbourhood schools.
"Labour's concern was the changes still put schools' choice above parents' choice. A school could develop an enrolment
scheme which gave them the right to accept a child from across town with great sporting or academic ability rather than
an average plodder who lived around the corner.
"Auckland Grammar is proving that our concerns were valid. The school is, in effect, sticking two fingers up at the
Minister of Education. While its enrolment scheme may meet the letter of the law, it is certainly against the spirit of
it.
"Labour will tighten up the law in time for planning for the 2001 year and I urge Auckland schools to be patient until
then. We will never force children to attend their neighbourhood schools - but they must the right if that is their
choice.
"Labour will require schools that need enrolment schemes to define their local 'home zone' and to comply with specified
criteria for filling any available places after local children have been accepted. Where neighbouring schools require
home zones, they will be required to be contiguous so that no children are left without rights of access to a local
school.
"We will require schools enrolling students from outside the home zone to operate a priority system so that once
students from within the home zone have been enrolled, remaining places are filled first by siblings of students
currently enrolled at the school, and then by siblings of students previously enrolled at the school
"If there is competition for these places, or if there are still places left after students in the priority categories
have been accepted, then the school will hold a ballot under the supervision of a Justice of the Peace.
"It would be logistically impossible to satisfy all families in all cases. But what Labour is proposing is a transparent
system that will not put schools choice above parents choice," Trevor Mallard said.