The Scotsman

Falling concrete just misses school pupil

● Life-threatenin­g incidents revealed as building defects logged by council

- By IAN SWANSON

A girl had a lucky escape when a lump of concrete the size of a rugby ball fell from the ceiling of a toilet block at a primary school in Edinburgh.

The pupil heard a loud crash above her and a later investigat­ion found the concrete had only been prevented from hitting her because it was caught by the structure of the suspended ceiling.

The incident at Towerbank Primary in Portobello is one of 42 “near misses” recorded in Edinburgh Council properties since 2014.

It happened in October last year but has only now been made public after questions were tabled about building failures “where the reasonably foreseeabl­e worst-case injury could have been lifethreat­ening”.

Last month, it was revealed that more than 20 schools are among 80 council buildings

0 The girl had a lucky escape during the incident in a toilet block at Towerbank Primary School, Portobello officially listed as being in poor or bad condition, with major defects and in need of urgent attention.

A council conditions survey found a £153 million backlog in maintenanc­e across the council estate. And council chiefs are now set to include new investment in maintenanc­e in their budget for 2018-19.

Tory councillor Jim Campbell asked about the near misses at last week’s full council meeting after learning of the Towerbank incident in a briefing from council officials.

He said: “A block of concrete about the size of a rugby ball fell from the ceiling. There was a pupil in the cubicle of the toilet and the block could have potentiall­y hit her had it not been stopped by the suspended ceiling.

“The girl heard a loud bang and crash above her and an investigat­ion found that was what had happened. That potentiall­y could have been quite serious.”

Council leader Adam Mcvey told Mr Campbell there had been 19 “near miss” incidents in city schools and 23 in other council buildings since 2014.

Mr Campbell said: “We’ve suspected for quite a long time that the maintenanc­e spend was insufficie­nt to maintain buildings in good condition.”

Finance convener Alasdair Rankin said: “The maintenanc­e of, and investment in, the council estate is a priority and this will be reflected in our coalition budget later this month. Having completed a full condition survey of the estate, we intend to initiate a wide programme of prioritise­d repair and maintenanc­e over the year as well as establishi­ng an annual pro-active maintenanc­e programme.

“We are already undertakin­g an extensive programme of ceiling and roof inspection­s across the estate and, where any issues are identified, remedial measures are immediatel­y put in place.”

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