Labour vows to abolish college fee rise

EDUCATION: THE €500 increase in the third-level student services charge would be reversed by Labour in government, party education…

EDUCATION:THE €500 increase in the third-level student services charge would be reversed by Labour in government, party education spokesman Ruairí Quinn said yesterday.

The increase, he added, was a step too far for students and their families “at a time when we should be encouraging people into education rather than erecting barriers to prevent them”.

Mr Quinn said Labour would also reverse the €200 charge for post-Leaving Cert courses recently introduced by Fianna Fáil.

Such courses, he added, were a pathway to further education for young people, and it was extremely important that people were incentivised to participate in them rather than being forced to pay more for the opportunity.

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“We refuse to go back to the days when only the relatively wealthy could count on going to university or when a family could only afford to send one of their children to college,” said Mr Quinn.

He told a Dublin press conference that the education budget had been cut by €1.1 billion since the start of the economic crisis.

Labour’s fiscal plan had earmarked €88 million annually to reinvest in a small number of strategic educational priorities, reflecting the party’s values.

This included €14 million to support its literacy strategy and €3 million to reverse the cut in the national educational psychological service imposed in the Budget.

Mr Quinn pledged to make literacy a national cause with the aim of ensuring that no child left school unable to read and write.

A national literacy strategy would be developed, requiring every school in the State to have an action plan.

The party’s additional funds for education were not a substitute for reform, but intended to complement it. There was also a requirement to ensure maximum return from the current public investment in education.

Michael O'Regan

Michael O'Regan

Michael O’Regan is a former parliamentary correspondent of The Irish Times