As this is my first Topical Issue, hopefully I will get the timing and all the rest of it right. I thank the Minister of State for taking this and wish him the very best of luck in his new role. I do not think I have congratulated him yet.
Today, I am asking about families in Dublin 8 who are looking to have a multidenominational secondary school for their children. They have been campaigning for a number of years and I have been involved with them over the past little while.
I suppose mine is one of those original families from a long time ago. When our family was looking for a multidenominational secondary school in the Dublin 8 area where I live, unfortunately, there was not one. We are a Unitarian family and, therefore, we would prefer our children to be educated in a multidenominational school. That suits our ethos. We also believe that religion should be done at home or after school. Many families in Dublin 8 are now facing this issue. I suppose we had this as a family in 2016 and my children do not go to school in Dublin 8 but travel outside of the area. The reason I am giving that personal information is because it is reflective of the families who are now fighting for a secondary school for their children in the future. Many of those children are still in primary school but they are looking to the future.
The fact is 38% of people in Dublin 8 identify as Catholic. That leaves a very large proportion who do not. It is one of the lowest proportions in the country, along with the north inner city and the south-east inner city. In Dublin 8, however, there is not one multidenominational second-level school.
Despite the youth population growing by 30% in the past decade, far exceeding the city and national averages, more than 50% of the children living in Dublin 8 are forced to leave the area for secondary school, including, as I said, my own children. By 2026, 2,135 students will need to travel outside the community daily. Parents have made their wishes clear and while 89% of them have said they want their children to attend a local secondary school, the system is not allowing for that. As a parent of children - teenagers and one who is 21 - let me tell the Minister of State that collecting your child outside your neighbourhood at the end of a party on a Saturday or Friday night is really a pain. As well as that, when they get a bit older, they do not want to be collected and they want to come home, the worry of that is quite immense. Being educated in your area with your friends is the preference for those 89% of parents who want to have their children educated there.
It is about parental choice and not having the ability to send your child to a school which reflects the ethos of the family. When those parents send their children to primary schools where they are educated in a multidenominational way, they would like to continue that for secondary school. The Department has stated previously that there is sufficient capacity in Dublin 8 but this is questioned by that group. They do not believe that. Where does the capacity exist for multidenominational schools when there is not one? Where is the capacity being reached there?
They also question the fact that other areas, such as Booterstown, Blackrock, Goatstown and Harold's Cross, have all been granted multidenominational schools but there are many more co-educational schools in those areas than there are in Dublin 8, and they are wondering why Dublin 8 is not being treated the same.
They also wonder about planning as a huge amount of planning and building is happening in Dublin 8 at present. Where will the capacity be for the people moving into those apartments or homes? If they have children, where will they go to school? Where is the capacity there?