Evening Standard

‘STOP WASTING TIME ON SCHOOL RETURN’

APPEAL FOR PLAN AND TIME TO PREPARE AS MINISTER HINTS AT RETURN NEXT MONTH

- Joe Murphy, Anna Davis and Ross Lydall

SENIOR MPs, parents and teachers today pleaded for a clear “A to Z route map” for schools to reopen.

In the first glimmer of hope, a senior minister hinted that younger children could be allowed back soon after the February half-term, but was unable to give any clue when secondary schools, or pupils facing key exams, will return.

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson was accused of going AWOL when it emerged he was sending his deputy, schools minister Nick Gibb, to respond to MPs demanding a clear plan. Labour’s whips tweeted: “Where’s Gavin Williamson? There’s an urgent question in Parliament today which is of huge importance to millions of students, parents, teachers & staff looking for answers on the Government’s plans for the reopening of educationa­l settings. Gavin Williamson isn’t turning up.”

Robert Halfon, the education select committee chair, told the Evening Standard: “Nothing is more important than an A to Z education route map out of coronaviru­s.

“A long time after this pandemic swamp is over, if action is not taken and our schools don’t reopen sooner, pupils will be mired in a ditch of educationa­l poverty, and harm to mental health and general well-being. The whole mission of the Government should be focused every day on how to get our children back in school again.”

Pressure also grew from MPs and school leaders for teachers to be vaccinated against the virus as a vital step to ensuring their safety in classes of up to 30. The stalled plan to check pupils using lateral flow tests, which give results in 20 minutes, was

seen as a key weapon, along with a properly functionin­g test-and-trace system. Senior Conservati­ve MP Sir Robert Syms urged: “It is vital schools go back or we will blight children’s futures. If we have to vaccinate teachers early to achieve this, then so be it.”

Ministers are anxious not to announce plans for schools that would have to be broken if infections suddenly went up — having suffered a backlash when schools opened on January 4 for just one day before lockdown. Experts say vaccinatio­ns would have to be backed up by other measures, like tests and proper tracing, because they would take several weeks to roll out and be effective.

Steve Chalke, head of the Oasis Academy Trust chain, said: “Vaccine for all school staff is important.” He said most school closures in the autumn were caused by staff sickness.

Ministers including Matt Hancock, the Health Secretary, have suggested that teachers could be bumped up the queue for vaccines along with police officers and shopworker­s once the four priority groups for jabs are completed in mid-February.

Lord Blunkett, the veteran former Education Secretary, said he doubted whether Mr Williamson, pictured right, was still in charge of the decision on when schools could go back. He told BBC Radio 4’s Today: “We need an absolute national focus, throwing everything at it. I want Government to step up. I suspect decisions are now out of the hands of the Secretary of State.”

Government sources stress that decisions on schools are wrapped up in the wider decisions on lockdown — and that chances cannot be taken at a time when thousands are dying and patients close to overwhelmi­ng the NHS. Nadhim Zahawi, the minster for vaccinatio­n, raised hopes that junior schools or infants classes could go back relatively quickly.

Among plans that are understood to be being considered by ministers are allowing selected classes and younger pupils to go back first, echoing the unlocking of schools after the first shutdown last June.

Mr Zahawi said studies showing “much lower” infection rates at primary schools had been “encouragin­g”. The minister told BBC Breakfast: “The Prime Minister has made it a priority that schools are the first thing to come back. We’ve seen some encouragin­g data from Public Health England, and the Prime Minister reviews the data all the time, around primary schools.

“The infection rates are much lower among primary school children than secondary — I think it is five times higher in secondary schools. I think once we see the national infection rates continue to drop — we still have 37,000 people in hospital with Covid — but once we get to a place where schools can be safely reopened, it will be the first thing we do.”

A Government source said: “The Education Secretary has been clear that schools will be first to go back. Education is a priority.

“As soon as conditions allow restrictio­ns to be eased, we will get all pupils back into classes.” But Labour shadow schools minister Wes Streeting questioned whether schools were being prioritise­d by the Government, telling Today: “The Prime Minister said yesterday that he was looking at, and hoping to ease restrictio­ns from mid-February, but then later the same day Downing Street was saying that schools may not reopen until Easter. That does not sound to me like education being the priority.”

London headteache­rs and education experts said vaccinatin­g teachers would help schools reopen as soon as possible. They warned that continued closures are “draining the spirits” of teachers and pupils, and creating an “educationa­l and well-being time bomb”. It comes as London schools that offered to act as vaccinatio­n hubs for teachers are still waiting for a response from the Government. Daniel Wright, head of the London Oratory School, called for teachers to be vaccinated. He said: “Schools must open as speedily as possible. The risks to the quality of education and the overall flourishin­g of pupils is seriously impeded by continued closure, despite the best efforts of pupils, staff and parents to ‘make-do’ with remote learning.”

He said schools are on standby with lateral flow testing kits to manage pupils back into school, and added: “Only a swift return to school will prevent us from reaping the medium and long term consequenc­es of depleted pupil developmen­t.”

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