Goldstone Primary School in Laburnham Avenue, Hove TWO popular primary schools have won their fight against cutting pupil numbers. Goldstone Primary School and Downs Infant School appealed to the schools adjudicator when they were ordered to reduce their intake from September next year by Brighton and Hove City Council. The schools criticised the quality of the council’s consultation process, highlighted the adverse financial implications and said that the move would limit parental choice. The two schools were among eight primaries and one secondary in Brighton and Hove to face a cut in their published admission number (PAN) from next year.
A similar study by website CV-Library found that East Anglia had the third most vacancies of all UK regions with 5,555 jobs available in the week commencing April 12.
According to Ms Magrini, Ipswich is in line with the national picture as to which sectors are recruiting most, despite the prominent role the hospitality industry plays in Suffolk.
However, things are not all rosy on the job market. Ipswich seems to have more job postings than the national average, which is good, she said. But it also seems to have more people claiming unemployment related benefits than the national average. It is good news that job postings are recovering this fast, but there s still something not going so well in Ipswich because there are a lot of people who are unemployed.
Alison Plaumer (pictured), from XR, has launched a petition on Brighton and Hove City Council s website for two plant-based days at state-run schools as soon as possible.
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