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Ombudsman finds European Commission Guilty of Maladministration

This is Decision of the European Ombudsman closing his inquiry into complaint 814/2010/JF (regarding European Schools) against the European Commission:

The Commission failed properly to respond to the complainant’s and the Staff Committee’s request for the organisation of an independent external audit of the European Schools. This constitutes an instance of maladministration.

You can read more on European Ombudsman’s website.

Discrimination to mark 60th anniversary of the European School

Press release, 23.05.2012

Founded in 1953, the European School of Luxembourg is the oldest and largest of the European School sites. The aim of the school was expressed in the words of Marcel Decombis, the first headmaster of Luxembourg I:

“Educated side by side, untroubled from infancy by divisive prejudices, acquainted with all that is great and good in the different cultures, it will be borne in upon them as they mature that they belong together. Without ceasing to look to their own lands with love and pride, they will become in mind Europeans, schooled and ready to complete and consolidate the work of their fathers before them, to bring into being a united and thriving Europe.”

To defend that ethos, the European School Non-Discrimination Campaign, representing a group of European School parents, today submitted a claim of serious discrimination against their children to the Luxembourg Ombudswoman for Children’s Rights. The meeting was constructive and included discussion of a legal opinion drafted by a discrimination law specialist practising in Luxembourg.

The group claims that the ‘vertical split’ of the school favours those nationalities that will remain at the original Kirchberg site, where the EU institutions are located and where most parents work. Other nationalities will be transferred to a new ‘Lux II’ school in the outlying town of Mamer. As of September, a child who speaks Italian, Greek, Danish, Hungarian or Czech can expect much less sleep, leisure, study and family time and much more commuting than their Portuguese, Spanish, Finnish, Swedish or Polish counterparts.

The ‘vehicular’ languages of the European institutions – English, French and German – have been divided on residential criteria, so that only those who live near Kirchberg, the most expensive part of one of the most expensive cities in Europe, will continue to benefit from work located school facilities. Those who live in more affordable accommodation away from the city centre now face an even longer commute as property prices in Mamer are prohibitive.

Lux II parents of young children are particularly enraged as they now face hours of additional commuting, exacerbated by the heavy traffic now expected in the Mamer area. Most will be unable to attend parent-teacher meetings, school concerts or assist in extra-curricular activities, thus effectively excluding their children from those activities. As one single mother with two young children, explained ‘Considering the traffic jams, I expect to arrive in my office, under optimistic circumstances, by 10 a.m. As our normal working day is 8 hours plus 1 hour lunch break, I will be leaving my office at 7 p.m. I do not have anybody to pick up my children from school for me, so they will have to wait for me in the nursery (supposing that it will be open that long) until 7.30 p.m. and we will happily reach our home at 8-8.30 p.m.’

As the reality of the plan takes shape, many parents are now asking why their children should face such disadvantage because of the language they speak. Gordon Mackenzie, spokesperson for the campaign, claimed that tensions were already mounting among EU staff in the city – ‘Can’t the decision-makers in Brussels see where this is going? Favouring some languages and discriminating against others can only foster resentment and that is already noticeable in the school and in the workplace. It goes against everything the EU is supposed to stand for.’ A member of the parents’ association pointed to one outcome of the language split: ‘A staff member who is a single Italian mother will be unable to work the same hours/earn the same career evaluation as a Finnish colleague, simply due to fact that her child has been assigned to the school at Mamer’.

Vassilis Sklias, a long-time campaigner against the vertical split and president of EPSU-CJ, the trade union at the European Court, concluded ‘This is what happens when decisions are taken without consulting those concerned.’

The European School Non-Discrimination Campaign is demanding that the decision to vertically split European School in Luxembourg along language lines be reversed. The parents want a horizontal split, with all pre-school and primary children, regardless of language or residential status, remaining in the Kirchberg site. The association argues that the Mamer site should cater for all secondary school children, as they do not need to be accompanied to school. This primary-secondary split would also allow for a greater choice of subjects which, along with career options, will suffer as a result of the vertical split of the school. This preferred option has been demanded by parents for years but ignored by the Commission and Board of Governors of the European Schools. Despite repeated requests, no official study to justify the vertical choice/reject the horizontal choice has ever been organised. On the other hand, the validity of the ‘horizontal’ arguments has been recognised on multiple occasions

For further information, contact info@esndc.eu.

http://esndc.eu

Press officer: Gordon Mackenzie
Tel. + 352 621 50 67 14
+ 352 4303 2696

French version

Greek version

Czech version

Slovak version

Hungarian version

Slovenian version

Trasport Survey by EE2: Analysis of the Results

Please find below the document posted on the EE2 website yesterday concerning the outcomes of the school transport survey. It would be useful to have your comments, feedback and input.

Mobility plan

thanks

Barbara

Letter from APEEE to Jean-Claude Juncker

This is the letter from APEEE sent to Prime Minister of Luxemburg, Mr. Jean-Claude Juncker 7 years ago.

Click here to see the letter to Mr. Junker

New and unwanted European School Luxembourg II

So finally we had the opportunity to see the new European school Luxembourg II. It is supposed to be a pleasant visit to an already finished school and we should all get to know where our kids will spend most of the days.

Unfortunately, we were queuing even before we came to the parking place. Since parking was already full when we came security guards asked us to park at Lycee parking around 200m from the school.

Construction site at European school Luxembourg II

It really was a construction site as the school administration warned us the day before. I don’t think they will be able to finish school till 4. September 2012. Especially not if you know that the whole construction sector has 4 weeks off in August.

Some observations and other parents’ comments:

  1. Playgrounds and recreational space are much smaller (less than 50 %?) than in the existing schools (any of them). No legal requirement on the size of playgrounds and numbers/ages of children?
  2. No sandpit in the nursery?
  3. Swimming pools are fully booked from the start of the year (last years of primary will only be swimming 1/2 of the school year) – what happens when the school is full?
  4. Stairs call for accidents. How will they be prevented? Lots and lots of stairs…
  5. Classrooms are adapted to Lux law – up to 23 children, and EU schools have a maximum of 30 children?! In my son’s class, there are 26…All the schools and CPE will have to share one football and one basketball pitch???!!!
  6. CPE is a special case since it does not have any recreational facilities (indoors or outdoors). In the crèche for instance I haven’t noticed a sandpit, they have one swing, and garderie has (from what I could see) no gym and Study Centre has any football/basketball pitch… The canteen is shared so I expect children in garderie (3-4 years) will have to share the canteen with primary and secondary? (I do hope that is a mistake)

The buildings are in general very impressive, but we should see in the first few months if they are also functional.