Hull Daily Mail

Reopening schools ‘is the top priority’

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BORIS JOHNSON said England’s schools would reopen “as fast as possible” as he faced Tory pressure to set out a timetable for pupils to return.

The Prime Minister said the Government would be “looking at the potential of relaxing some measures” as England’s lockdown restrictio­ns are reviewed on February 15 but could not guarantee that pupils would return to classes before Easter.

“There’s nothing I want to do more than reopen schools, I’ve fought to keep schools open for as long as I possibly could,” Mr Johnson said.

“We want to see schools back as fast as possible, we want to do that in a way that is consistent with fighting the epidemic and keeping the infection rate down.”

The Prime Minister faced pressure to set out a timetable for pupils to return to class – currently only vulnerable children and those whose parents are key workers are attending school, with home learning for all others.

His official spokesman said the Government would examine the data “and that will inform what we may or may not be able to ease from (February) 15 onwards”.

He added: “It has always been our intention to ease restrictio­ns where we can from that point on the 15th, and schools are obviously our top priority.”

The Prime Minister was speaking on a visit to a vaccinatio­n site at Barnet Football Club in north London as the latest figures showed 6,413,928 first doses of vaccine have been administer­ed in Great Britain.

Mr Johnson said: “I do think now this massive achievemen­t has been made of rolling out this vaccinatio­n programme, I think people want to see us making sure we don’t throw that away by having a premature relaxation and then another big surge of infection.”

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson is widely expected to confirm this week that there will be no return to the classroom after the February half-term break, as ministers had hoped.

A minister is expected to answer an urgent question on the issue in the Commons today.

Robert Halfon, Tory chairman of the Commons Education Committee, told the BBC: “It may be that one thing the Government should consider is that even if there are tighter restrictio­ns in other parts of our society and economy, you have those restrictio­ns in order to enable the schools to open.”

Meanwhile, senior ministers are due to meet today to discuss a proposal to require travellers arriving in the UK to pay to quarantine at a designated hotel to ensure they are following the rules on self-isolating.

The move follows concerns about the possibilit­y of new coronaviru­s variants being imported from elsewhere in the world following the emergence of concerning strains in South Africa and Brazil.

 ??  ?? Boris Johnson during yesterday’s site visit
Boris Johnson during yesterday’s site visit

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