Gippsland › Latest news › Peter Walsh MP
Students in regional Victoria such as Gippsland should not have to endure more weeks locked out of the classroom
Students in regional Victoria should not have to endure more weeks locked out of the classroom.
According to the Andrews Government's roadmap, only Prep to Grade 2 and final year students will be back in the classroom this week to start to get their studies back on track. Despite high vaccination rates across regional Victoria, it'll still be more than three weeks before all country kids are back in school full-time.
Schools will begin a staged return to onsite learning from the first week of Term 4, remote and flexible learning will continue to be delivered to students on the days they are not attending onsite
No reason to delay
Leader of The Nationals and Shadow Minister for Regional Victoria Peter Walsh said regional students had already sacrificed too much after the virus spread out of control in metro Melbourne. "Regional Victorians are leading the way doing our bit to protect ourselves and our community with more than 60 percent of people over 16 now fully vaccinated, while 88 per cent have had their first dose," Mr Walsh said.
"But under Labor's roadmap our regional kids will still wait until October 26 to get back to full time, on-site study. Why should kids living in council areas like Buloke, Towong and Hindmarsh - which have never recorded a single case of COVID, ever - continue to have their education disrupted."
"There's no reason to delay - our schools and childcare in regional areas that aren't in lockdown should be able to fully reopen, so kids and families can get on the road to normal."
Returning to minimum level
Under the Andrews Government's Melbourne-centric roadmap, many community sports clubs can only return at minimum levels at the 70 per cent threshold. Mr Walsh said regional communities should get these freedoms sooner. At 70 per cent, all community sport should return for fully vaccinated Victorians, with an adequate number of players for competition.
"Community sport is crucial to the mental wellbeing of Victorians, but our local sports clubs are in ruins after cancelling games and - in many cases - entire seasons in the past 18 months. Metro double dose vaccination is at 52 per cent, which means country people will be stuck waiting for the city to catch up." Mr Walsh said.
Moving on sooner to reopen
Mr Walsh also said, "Regional Victoria must be able to move into the next phase of our recovery when we reach the 80 per cent milestone, without delay. This approach is a good incentive for country people to get the job and will see our schools, businesses and communities moving on sooner to reopen, rebuild and recover."
Pictures from Warragul Regional College Facebook page.
Source: www.gippsland.com
Published by: news@gippsland.com

Community feedback strengthens Wellington's Road Management Plan, highlighting priorities for road upgrades

East Gippsland kids invited to join and send entries for National Water Week poster competition by 12 September 2025

Future Wellington Community feedback shapes draft plans, final input invited before 16 July 2025

Gippsland Water commits to keeping customer bills affordable despite cost of living pressures

Have your say on Latrobe's draft Domestic Animal Management Plan 2026 - 2029 until 29 July 2025

Latrobe City Council endorses new Council Plan and Community Vision 2025-2029 to guide Latrobe's future growth

Wellington Shire Councillors advocate for region's needs at National Local Government Assembly in Canberra on 24 - 27 June 2025

East Gippsland tourism and hospitality masterclass to build sustainable, resilient businesses and grow positive

Southern Rural Water celebrates 30 years of service with modernisation, partnerships and sustainable water
