Powys Council could have to pay to transport pupils to schools in England if a county primary is shut, councillors have been told.

Churchstoke Primary School is one of four sites which could be shut under new plans, which are set to go out to a public consultation.

But as the authority's cabinet voted to go ahead with a consultation into the plans, senior councillors heard that the moves could lead to some pupils having to be transported to schools in England at a cost to Powys.

Education officer Marianne Evans told Monday's meeting: "We want them to stay in Wales, we would then need to provide transport to the closest school in Powys.

“However if they choose to transfer to Shropshire, and it’s the closest school, then we’d also have to provide transport as well.”

At the meeting the county councillor for Churchstoke, Cllr Michael J Jones, stressed that the village was growing along with pupil numbers.

Cllr Jones said: “There has been a spate of house building.

“A housing association development has been completed, and the majority of which are family homes.”

Cllr Jones explained that there were 27 children living there, and 14 of them already attended Churchstoke with several more at pre-school.

He believed that social housing associations would not have chosen to build in Churchstoke if they thought the village would not have a school, “in walking distance.”

Cllr Jones said: “Because of the new housing and the fact there are 90 children in the pre-school group, numbers will be in the mid forties, there could be 63 in two years time.”

“Inevitably cost per pupil will fall, but if the school does close all of these children will have to be transported somewhere.

“Those costs would rise, and be far more than the £19,000, (estimated transport costs) and wipe out the £50,000 expected annual savings.”

Cllr Jones continued: “A poll of parents has shown that 69 per cent would send their children to an English school.

“Churchstoke is in Wales.

“Welshness is not just about language, but culture, heritage and identity.

“The school teaches and promotes Welshness.”

Education consultant, Geraint Rees said that the new Welsh education curriculum had a “global vision,” and it was “a right” for every child in Wales to be taught through it.

He explained this is why the recommendation said “transfer to another school in Powys”.

Council leader Cllr Rosemarie Harris, (Llangynidr – Independent),  said: “Proposed development, projected pupil numbers and transport costs ran as a thread through nearly all of the correspondence we had.

“I would seek assurance from our officers that those will be looked at extremely carefully.”

The cabinet voted unanimously to start the statutory process to close Churchstoke C.P. School from, August 31, 2022, with pupils to transfer to their nearest alternative schools in Powys.

Each pupil at Churchstoke costs £7,475 which compares to the Powys average of £4,264.

The school has 38 pupils at the moment, and had been projected to fall to 16 by 2025 – but that calculation did not include the housing developments.