The Gold Coast Bulletin

Parents in a lather over soap

- EMILY TOXWARD

A FURORE has erupted over a lack of hand soap at state schools across the Gold Coast, with parents taking to social media to vent their frustratio­ns.

The backlash came yesterday after primary and state schools created emails and Facebook posts assuring parents they were stepping up efforts, including an increase in toilet cleaning and daily checking of soap supplies.

School messages were in line with recent government guidelines to cancel all non-essential mass gatherings attended by more than 500 people.

Cancellati­ons included assemblies, choir practices, camps, inter-school sports, fetes, school concerts, fundraisin­g colour runs and school informatio­n nights.

A Coomera Springs State School Facebook post announced an “increased frequency of toilet cleaning and checking of soap supplies during school day”. Many parents expressed their disappoint­ment that soap was not always available at their school, with one parent saying “Great to hear that toilet hand soap etc will be available at all times as my girls regularly tell me they are empty”.

“My daughter tells me there is hardly ever soap in the toilets so I’m glad to hear that will be addressed. It would be great if it was like that all the time,” said another parent.

A Varsity College Secondary and Primary College parent said her three children advised her soap was a rare thing, and a mother from Pimpama State Secondary College echoed these concerns.

“My daughter has also informed me about the lack of soap situation at school but this has been happening since she started there five years ago she won’t use the toilets unless she really needs to. I’ve been sending her to school with hand sanitiser for years because of this,” one mother said.

A member of the Merrimac State High School Facebook page asked: “So have the school upped the soap in all bathrooms as students have been saying they never have any in them on a normal day?”

Meanwhile, a Pacific Pines mother said two of her children were sick last week with “sniffles, coughs and temps” and she kept them off school. However, they were almost back to normal but she decided to err on the side of caution and keep all four home just in case.

“But when I rang to tell the school they told me only two of my four could be marked as sick and the other two would be marked as an unjustifie­d absence on their attendance record. It’s hard to know what to do at the moment,” she said.

Southern Cross University has cancelled all non-essential events until June, including its graduation ceremonies. The campus reopened last week after being closed for one day after a visiting staff member was diagnosed with coronaviru­s.

Chief marketing officer Dean Gould said where possible courses were actively being transition­ed to online delivery mode, staff were encouraged to work from home and the on-campus cleaning regimen had stepped up to the “highest level of deep cleaning”.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia