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Jun 2022
Opposition councillors on Harrogate Borough Council are set to call for Woodfield Community Primary School to be saved from closure.
A four-week consultation on a proposal to close the school on December 31 ends on July 4.
Some parents and unions have called for the school to remain open. But North Yorkshire County Council, which is the local education authority, has said it has exhausted all options to keep the school open.
At a borough council meeting next week, Liberal Democrat councillors Pat Marsh and Philip Broadbank are due to submit a motion requesting that the authority supports keeping the school open.
Cllr Broadbank said there was concern over the future of the school and what could potentially happen to the site on Woodfield Road in Bilton.
He said:
A public meeting over the future of the school was held earlier this month.
Mr McVeigh-Kaye said he had secured meetings with local politicians, including Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative MP Andrew Jones about extending the consultation.
A poorly attended public meeting this month saw people express anger at how a school with good facilities, in a densely populated area of Harrogate, could end up in this position.
But, Adam Dixon, the county council’s strategic planning manager for children and young people, pointed to how Woodfield pupil numbers had fallen from 154 in 2018 to 37 this year.
Woodfield, he added, faced a cumulative deficit of £229,000 in 2023/34, due to low pupil numbers.
The consultation over the future of the school closes on July 4. You can have your say here.
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