Commenting on today's report by PHE England and the Chief Medical
Officer's comments on the full return of schools and colleges,
Kevin Courtney, Joint General Secretary, of the National
Education Union, said:
"The NEU agrees with the Chief Medical officer about the benefits
a return to full time education will have for children and young
peoples education and well being.
"We believe that it is vital that the Government must take every
step it can both to allow this wider re-opening and to keep the R
rate below 1.
"Today’s report by PHE England shows that there were only a small
number of outbreaks in schools after the partial wider opening in
June, but as the report itself acknowledges there are limitations
on the generalisability of its findings - both because there was
little data from secondary schools and because in primary schools
much smaller ‘bubble” sizes were possible in the summer.
"It is very important that such monitoring studies are maintained
during the period of wider school opening.
"Schools and colleges are currently doing all they can to ensure
their buildings are as COVID secure as possible, as well as
dealing with the fallout from the exams fiasco.
"However school staff, parents and pupils are being sorely let
down by Government because of a lack of a Plan B and of ensuring
robust track trace and test is in place throughout the country.
"We believe the Government is negligent in the extreme.
"Schools and colleges need to know what should happen if an
outbreak of the virus occurs in individual schools or more widely
with either national, regional or local spikes. Government advice
needs to cover the possible self-isolation of bubbles and, in
extremis, moving to rotas or to more limited opening. It needs to
cover advice to heads about the protections needed for staff in
high risk categories if infection rates rise.
"Government should be employing more teachers and seeking extra
teaching spaces to allow education to continue in a Covid secure
manner if infections rise. This should include employment of
student teachers who have finished their courses and not yet
found jobs, as well as mobilisation of supply staff."