The Lib Dems warned Scottish education is “already under heaps of pressure even without pipes and bathrooms causing chaos”.
Scotland’s crumbling school buildings have caused more than 300 sewage leaks in recent years, shock figures show.
One major leak at a primary in East Ayrshire even saw waste water flow down corridors and into an area reserved for infants. And raw sewage also spilled from staff toilets at a school in North Lanarkshire.
The figures, uncovered by the Scottish Lib Dems, found a total of 312 reports of sewage leaks at schools across nine local authority areas since 2019.
Party leader Alex Cole-Hamilton said it was proof that too many school buildings are in “a right state”. The Lib Dems have called for the modernisation of the educational estate to be sped up as a priority.
Cole-Hamilton said: “Scottish education is already under heaps of pressure even without pipes and bathrooms causing chaos.
“The Scottish school estate is in a right state. If we want teachers to get on with teaching the next generation the skills that they will need, then we need to provide them with the classrooms and facilities they need to do that job.
“Scottish Liberal Democrats want to get Scottish education back to its best – expanding pupil support in every school and giving every child the best start in life.
“In many constituencies we are on the verge of winning against the SNP but wherever you are, every vote for the Scottish Liberal Democrats on the second peach ballot will deliver change with fairness at its heart.”
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Official figures published by the Scottish Government previously found the number of school buildings rated as being in “good” condition has fallen by nearly a fifth since 2021.
A report last year found 24 per cent of state school buildings in Scotland have the highest rating of “good” – defined as “performing well and operating efficiently”.
But the SNP Government insisted the combined number of school buildings rated “good” or “satisfactory” – meaning “performing adequately but showing minor deterioration” – are by far the most common ranking.
Some 189 school buildings were rated “poor” – 7.7 per cent of all schools, down from 9.7 per cent in 2021.
Six school buildings were given the worst rating of “bad” – defined as “economic life expired and/or risk of failure”. In 2021, there was only one “bad” school building.
Since 2019, 14 new schools have opened to pupils as part of the Scottish Government’s £2 billion Learning Estate Investment Programme (LEIP).
Alex Kerr, SNP candidate for Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse: “Under the SNP, over 1,100 schools have been built or upgraded – providing more accessible and more inclusive environments for pupils and staff.
“The latest school estate statistics, show that a record 92% of Scotland’s schools are now in a good or satisfactory condition, which is up from 62.7% in 2007, when the SNP first came to office.
“We have always worked very closely with the Lib Dems – with them voting for our last two budgets and more than 90% of SNP legislation under John Swinney, and we are happy to continue working constructively in the new parliament to drive further progress on the school estate.”
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