Skip to main content

Star Weekly - Wyndham - 5th February 2025

Page 1

WEDNESDAY, 5 FEBRUARY, 2025

Bell rings at Barayip Barayip Primary School has celebrated is first week and the ‘Barayip Buzz’ is in the air. One hundred and fifty-five students donned the uniform with pride and educators welcomed the community with big smiles and open hearts. “The connections we are building between school and home are already strong and something we are very proud of,” founding principal Nicole O’Brien said. “The happy smiles, the welcoming community and the sense of belonging has been felt by everyone.” The ethos of the Tarneit school is tied to its name ‘Barayip’, the Bunurong word meaning spring. “Our school is all about growth, excellence, new beginnings, flourishing, blossoming and exuberant beauty,” Ms O’Brien said. She said the school motto ‘deep gratitude and growth,’ will guide its community. “Our deep gratitude and growth are shown through a love of learning, social intelligence, teamwork, and kindness,“ she said. “A sense of calm and our deep gratitude shines throughout everything we do.” Barayip Primary School founding principal Nicole O’Brien prep student Zayn. (Ljubica Vrankovic) 454106_03

Gatto backs McLindon Underworld identity Mick Gatto has backed Werribee by-election candidate Aidan McLindon’s plan to push for self-defence lessons in schools if he is elected to state parliament. Mr McLindon launched his policy alongside Mr Gatto on Sunday, February 2. According to Mr McLindon, the program would introduce self-defence disciplines in primary and secondary schools as part of a 12-month pilot program to commence in term three this year. Mr McLindon, who is also fighting calls for him to resign from his position as Whittlesea mayor, said he dealt with troubled students

as a teacher and the introduction of such a program was well overdue. “Boys and girls of all ages need to be equipped to have the capacity to defend themselves should the need arise,” Mr McLindon said. Mr Gatto said he agreed that the discipline of self-defence was a subject which would add value to the Victorian education curriculum. “As a young lad I was a bit of a knockabout and it was boxing that channelled my energies towards something useful,” he said. “If we get McLindon into state parliament, we can genuinely start re-engaging our young people again.” If adopted, the pilot would run as an ‘opt

in’ program that would allow students who are unwilling to physically participate to study the theoretical side of the program and various disciplines of self-defence. The program would also require students to have permission from a parent or guardian before engaging in any form of contact sport. Mr McLindon’s policy has been ridiculed on social media, with residents taking to Facebook to question whether it is satire. Others questioned whether Mr Gatto would get a working with children check. If elected as Werribee MP, Mr McLindon said he will also table the ‘Tough Love Act,’ a crime and rehabilitation bill designed to deter

young offenders. The proposed bill would implement a three-tier approach to dealing with offenses. Minor offenses will result in offenders being rostered on a graffiti clean up; the first serious offense will mandate a minimum of one week attendance at a boot camp; offenders aged 17 and older will have to undertake a mandatory 12 months of national service. Mr McLindon said the criminality among youth he has witnessed in outer Australian suburbia was “an indictment to the Australian way of life”. “Werribee has effectively been handed over to unruly youth who have very few boundaries knowing there are little consequences for their actions,” he said.

12744557-EA07-25

By Jaidyn Kennedy


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Star Weekly - Wyndham - 5th February 2025 by Star Weekly - Issuu