Daily Mail

SCHOOL CLOSURES CHAOS

Nine shut despite advice it’s unnecessar­y – as four pupils from Prince George and Charlotte’s primary kept at home

- By James Tozer

PARENTS face further coronaviru­s chaos today, with at least 33 schools shutting or sending pupils home over infection fears – despite official advice that it isn’t necessary.

At least six around the UK have said they will remain shut until next week – in many cases after pupils returned from skiing trips to northern Italy.

Another three will not reopen until tomorrow at the earliest, and at least 24 sent some pupils home as a precaution.

The refusal to let healthy children return to classes comes after Health Secretary Matt Hancock told the Commons yesterday there was ‘no need to close the school’ or send children home in most cases.

On Tuesday, at least 18 schools sent pupils home as staff struggled to reconcile official advice with fears that some may have caught the virus on half-term ski trips.

The news came as it emerged last night that four children at Prince George and Princess Charlotte’s school were in self- isolation over fears that they could have been exposed to coronaviru­s.

The pupils from the private London prep school Thomas’s Battersea are being kept at home while they await test results.

Two are said to have returned from a trip to northern Italy, where there has been a major outbreak of the disease. One reportedly has a cough and the other has a fever.

The other two have not visited areas seriously affected by coronaviru­s, which is formally called Covid-19, but have similar symptoms. There is no suggestion that George, six, or Charlotte, four, have been exposed to the disease.

A school spokesman told the Spanish news website El Confidenci­al: ‘ We are taking the potential risks connected with the spread of Covid-19 very seriously and are following government guidance to the letter around both prevention against infection and in dealing with cases where staff or pupils are suspected of being exposed to the virus or display any symptoms. We have a very small number of pupils who have been tested and these individual­s are, as per Government advice, remaining at home pending their test results.’

Kensington Palace declined to comment last night.

On the subject of whether schools should shut, Mr Hancock said: ‘If anyone has been in contact with a suspected case in a childcare or an educationa­l setting, no special measures are required while test results are awaited. There is no need to close the school or send other students or staff home.’

He said pupils awaiting coronaviru­s test results would be ‘advised individual­ly about returning to education’ if they test negative.

‘In most cases, closure... will be unnecessar­y, but this will be a local decision based on various factors, including profession­al advice,’ he added. ‘The message that we do not have a policy of blanket school closures is important. Unless there is specific profession­al advice, or until there is a positive test, schools should stay open.’

Warning against mass panic, Mr Hancock said: ‘Overreacti­on has its costs, too, economic and social, and so we have to keep the public safe – but we also need to act in a way that’s proportion­ate.’

However, many parents were more concerned yesterday that infection could have spread before pupils who returned from Italy were sent home. Among the schools closed all week is Trinity Catholic College in Middlesbro­ugh, where a spokesman said a ‘deep clean’ lasting several days was booked before the Mr Hancock’s announceme­nt.

Andy Byles, whose Year 8 son went on a school ski trip to Verona at half-term, said: ‘From Sunday night my wife was told kids had to go to school. Thirty or so went on Monday. They should not have been at school, in my opinion.’

Archbishop Temple School in Preston, Lancashire, shut at noon yesterday and will not reopen until Monday – even though pupils returning from a ski trip did not visit a locked-down area of Italy.

Tudor Grange Academy in Kingshurst, Birmingham, said it would be shut until tomorrow at the earliest for a deep clean after six pupils who had been on a ski trip to Italy self-isolated when they developed flu-like symptoms.

Gedney Church End Primary School in Lincolnshi­re said it would not reopen until tomorrow while it was deep-cleaned, citing ‘a potential connection’ to coronaviru­s.

Cransley School in Northwich, Cheshire, is shut all week after 34 pupils and staff skied in Lombardy last week. Head master Richard Pollock said the decision was taken ‘regardless’ of official advice.

In addition, at least 24 schools sent some pupils home yesterday over coronaviru­s fears.

By contrast, St Christophe­r’s CofE High School in Accrington, Lancashire – where pupils spent half-term skiing in Italy’s Aosta Valley – was due to reopen today following ‘a thorough clean’.

Also open as normal today after pupils were sent home on Tuesday are Sandbach High School and Brine Leas School in Cheshire.

Paul Cosford, medical director of Public Health England, told Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘Our general advice is not to close schools.’

He reiterated that anyone who had been in a town locked down by Italian authoritie­s should self-isolate. But those who had been to other northern regions of the country should carry on as normal unless they show symptoms.

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 ??  ?? Precaution­s: Prince George and Charlotte
Precaution­s: Prince George and Charlotte

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