Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Cockroach prank plagues school

- By Marijke Hall mhall@thekmgroup.co.uk

School bosses were forced to call in pest controller­s five times after pupils released cockroache­s in a sixth-form common room.

Specialist teams returned repeatedly to Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar in Faversham after the insects were set free as part of an end-of-year prank.

Dead cockroache­s were removed four times over a threeweek period, and such was the scale of the issue that exterminat­ion work was still required four months after the stunt in 2016.

The school was one of a number across the Canterbury district and Faversham to require the services of pest controller­s over the past three years.

Figures reveal there were 74 call-outs in that time - not including routine checks - with rats, wasps and mice topping the list of unwanted visitors.

All three pests were cleared from Selling Primary School, which had 14 call-outs, while Chartham Primary School had eight, including a persistent rat in the caretaker’s shed.

At Spires Academy, pest controller­s were called out twice, in one instance to deal with fleas, and another time, flies.

At Ospringe Church of England Primary, a squirrel had to be removed from a classroom, and in a separate incident, a mouse had to be caught and taken away.

Paul Higgin, premises manager at the Abbey School in Faversham, says pest controller­s come in on a routine basis and this involves rabbit and mole gassing.

“The Abbey School is surrounded by farmland and new building developmen­t so it is expected to see the migration of the vermin,” he added.

“We have always had monthly visits; the school is huge and set in many acres of land. I would expect this to be standard.”

He adds that it is practicall­y impossible to set traps for vermin around schools due to health and safety concerns to pupils.

Referring to the cockroach incident, Queen Elizabeth’s head teacher David Anderson said: “It was a minor incident at the time which caused little disruption.”

Kent County Council cabinet member for education, Roger Gough, said schools are required to provide a clean and safe environmen­t for children, which includes taking measures to deal with potentiall­y harmful pests.

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