Apparently there is a saving of €6.5 million per year to be had on this one. Hmmm, it is but a drop in the ocean compared to NAMA, bank bonuses, FAS, etc. etc.
My children attended a COI primary school and they had the most wonderful time there. They are not COI might I add. I was born and raised Catholic but quit about 20 years ago. By the time my kids left primary I had been chairperson of the parents council for 4 years. We were always welcomed and never felt uncomfortable and are still in touch with the school some years later. I still devote time to assisting the school anyway I can.
After they finished primary, I found that as a single mother I couldn't afford the fees to send my children to private school. We didn't qualify for any grants as we were not COI.
It was only recently my son told me that he had a pretty awful time in secondary and took a serious amount of abuse for 'kicking with the wrong foot'. It didn't matter that he was not Protestant, Presbyterian, Baptist or in any way Anglican, he was not Catholic and therefore was ostracised and subjected to name calling and even physical abuse. He never told me because he didn't want to cause me worry. He says that the bigotry was a daily occurence until he got to Leaving Cert and it tailed off. My daughter attended the same school but never had any issues (at least with religion, just usual awful *****y girl stuff

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That is why previous to this the government had paid additional funding to schools operated within the Anglican faith. So kids could attend a school within their own faith without fear of prejudice and receive religious instruction within their own faith. Said schools are opened to other denominations and I have never ever heard of any bigotry or prejudice going on there and all of my children's friends loved boarding school, no matter where they attended.
Okay - done it again, huge post, I do get carried away sometimes!!
