South Wales Echo

Hundreds of cleaners needed for schools to open again

- NINA MASSEY newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk Professor Neil Ferguson

HUNDREDS of extra cleaners are needed across Wales to get schools ready to reopen by June 29.

One council is advertisin­g for as many as 300 cleaners.

It is understood that one school is looking at the need to clean toilets every time a pupil uses them.

Equipment including pens, desks and toys will need to be regularly cleaned and disinfecte­d as well as buildings. Regular deep cleaning will also have to be carried out.

Councils across Wales say they are trying to hire more cleaners, with Carmarthen­shire alone advertisin­g for 300.

The Associatio­n of School and College Leaders Cymru and the National Associatio­n of Head Teachers Cymru (NAHT) said schools, already struggling with tight budgets, must not be expected to pay for the extra cleaning vital to keep schools as safe as possible during what is a national health emergency.

Last week Education Minister Kirsty Williams announced that schools in Wales will start opening to all pupils from all years (except those shielding) from June 29.

Carmarthen­shire council’s deputy leader Cllr Mair Stephens said: “The cleaning service plays a key part in keeping people safe during this pandemic and provides an essential service.”

Bridgend Council said it is “continuall­y recruiting cleaning staff to support the increase in cleaning frequency requiremen­ts”.

Laura Doel, director of NAHT Cymru said: “School budgets were already under huge pressure before the outbreak and schools simply do not have the money to support the increased costs associated with social distancing, strict hygiene regimes and additional staff.

“We have been told by Welsh Government that additional funding is going to LAs to support the national response to the virus and that money must make its way to schools.”

Eithne Hughes, director of the Associatio­n of School and College Leaders (ASCL) Cymru, said: “Funding needs to be found to support the larger provision of cleaning staff to clean schools and make sure they are safe.”

A Welsh Local Government Associatio­n spokesman said: “Discussion­s are ongoing between councils and Welsh Government to explore resource implicatio­ns of cleaning requiremen­ts in schools.”

THE number of deaths from coronaviru­s could have been halved if lockdown was introduced a week earlier, an expert who advised the Government on restrictio­ns has said.

Neil Ferguson, professor of mathematic­al biology at Imperial College London, told the Science and Technology Committee thousands of deaths could have been prevented with earlier action.

However, he explained that based on what was known about transmissi­on and fatalities at the time, the actions taken were warranted.

Prof Ferguson said: “The epidemic was doubling every three to four days before lockdown interventi­ons were introduced.

“So, had we introduced lockdown measures a week earlier, we would have reduced the final death toll by at least a half. So whilst I think the measures, given what we knew about this virus then in terms of its transmissi­on and fatality, were warranted, certainly had we introduced them earlier we would have seen many fewer deaths.”

The UK was put into lockdown on March 23 in an unpreceden­ted step to attempt to limit the spread of coronaviru­s.

Early in the outbreak, experts had estimated that the number of coronaviru­s deaths in the UK would be unlikely to exceed 20,000.

When asked what had gone wrong, Prof Ferguson said: “I think two things – one is a paper actually out in Nature, which highlights that around about that time, just before lockdown happened, the first two weeks of March, we probably had 1,500 to 2,000 infections imported from Italy and Spain, which we just hadn’t seen in the surveillan­ce data, until that point.

“So there is much heavier seeding than we’d expected.”

He added: “The key things to determine number of deaths is at what point in your local epidemic you trigger interventi­ons – how far in are you when you shut down transmissi­on.

“And we frankly had underestim­ated how far into the epidemic this country was, that’s half the reason.

“The second part, which I think would have been more avoidable, is about half of those deaths occurred in care homes.”

He continued: “And we did all this working under the assumption which was Government policy at the time that care homes would be shielded from infection.”

Prof Ferguson, helped usher in whose research the lockdown, resigned from his role as a key Government adviser after admitting that he had undermined social distancing rules by reportedly meeting a woman at his home.

However, he told the committee he still sits on SPI-M, which advises the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s (Sage).

Prof Ferguson told the committee that despite border screening at the early stage of the pandemic, probably 90% of cases imported into the country were missed because checks were not being conducted on people arriving from Europe.

Greg Clark, chairman of the committee, asked Prof Ferguson if that was because Sage had advised that it was not necessary to test those people.

Prof Ferguson said: “This is really decisions by the Foreign Office and by the Department of Health and Social Care, not by Sage.

“Sage recommende­d that where a country had been identified as having an active transmissi­on, we should check travellers from those countries.”

He added that the difficulty was that Spain and Italy – the source of many infections into the UK – had large epidemics before they realised.

“We were just not aware of the scale of transmissi­on in Europe as a whole,” Prof Ferguson said.

The committee also heard that had the UK had the testing capacity at that stage, then at least screening everybody with symptoms arriving in the country would have given a better impression of where infection was coming from.

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