Tony Blair BACKS Boris Johnson’s plans to reopen schools – as teaching unions and the government continue to clash over June 1 target

  • PM’s plans to send children to school next month has come under attack 
  • Union chiefs have warned teachers it will ‘not be safe’ to mark pupils’ books 
  • But Tony Blair says the government is ‘right, I think, to be reopening the schools’
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

Tony Blair has said Boris Johnson’s administration is right to be opening schools again.

The Prime Minister’s plans to start sending children back to school next month has come under attack from teaching unions and some local authorities, with critics arguing it is too soon to lift the coronavirus-related lockdown restrictions.

Mr Johnson, in his address to the nation on May 10, said Reception, Year 1 and Year 6 pupils would be the first to go back, starting on June 1 ‘at the earliest’.

His ambition, Mr Johnson said, was that secondary pupils scheduled to take exams next year would ‘get at least some time with their teachers before the holidays’.

Despite criticism of the proposals in some quarters, Mr Johnson has found an unlikely ally in three-time general election winner Mr Blair.

In an interview with BBC Newsnight on Monday evening, Mr Blair said the Government was adhering to scientific advice by preparing schools to open their doors again.

‘They’re right, I think, to be reopening the schools,’ said Mr Blair. 

Boris Johnson’s plans to start sending children back to school next month has come under attack from teaching unions and some local authorities, with critics arguing it is too soon to lift the coronavirus-related lockdown restrictions

‘I don’t think they would say that they’re putting school opening above health risks. What they’re doing is basing it on the evidence, actually.

‘There are countries that have reopened parts, at least, of their school system.

‘If you look at all the best evidence and again, my institutes assembled a lot of the different data on this, it’s, especially for younger children, the risks of transmission are actually quite low.’ 

Union chiefs have warned teachers it will ‘not be safe’ to mark pupils’ books when schools reopen, while casting yet more doubt on the government’s plans to bring children back to primary schools next month.

Staff who are members of the UK biggest teaching union will be told to go through a 20-page checklist with their bosses before returning to work. They will only be deemed safe if there is a ‘yes’ answer to every question, say the National Education Union (NEU).

It comes just days after five former education secretaries – Labour’s Alan Johnson and Carles Clarke, plus Conservatives Nicky Morgan, Damian Hinds and Justine Greening – revealed they were all backing a phased reopening of schools.  

Staff who are members of the UK biggest teaching union will be told to go through a 20-page checklist with their bosses before returning to work (pictured: Social distancing measures as a child studies on a marked table at a primary school in Worcester, May 18)

But this week a third council in England was set to defy official advice to reopen schools in June. Pupils in Bury will not return ‘while high levels of Covid-19 remain’.

Following growing opposition to the plan to reopen primaries to certain year groups from June 1, Bury council says that while high levels of the infection remain in the north west, ‘the borough will not be re-opening schools on June 1’.

What safety measures are planned to reduce coronavirus in schools? 

Ministers have unveiled a raft of measures to keep pupils who do return to school safe from coronavirus.

They include: 

  • Classes of no more than 15 pupils
  • Socially distanced desks
  • Children told to only mix in small groups, with those groups not mixing with others.
  • Increased and regular cleaning of schools 
  • Staggered lunch and break times
  • Staggered arrivals and departures
  • Packed lunches
  • No shared classroom equipment 

Unclear guidance around practical arrangements for social distancing within schools, as well as concerns over testing and tracing, and supply of PPE, were listed as other reasons for refusing to open.

Unions and the government are continuing to clash over plans to reopen primary schools by June 1. But the NEU, which has more than 450,000 members, has cast fresh doubt on the government’s plans, which were confirmed by Education Secretary Gavin Williamson over the weekend.

Union bosses have told members it is ‘extremely unlikely’ that primary schools will reopen on June 1.

In a document, named the Planning Guide for Primary Schools, seen by MailOnline, the NEU has challenged the government’s plan to use micro-groups – similar to the system used in Denmark – which will reduce the need to keep students and teachers more than two metres apart.

The NEU instead is urging strict two metre social distancing measures remain in place – as is being done in other workplaces.

The planning document also includes a 20-page safety checklist, written jointly with fellow unions, Unite, Unison and GMB, which it will urge its members to go through with bosses before they return to schools.

Kevin Courtney, Joint General Secretary of the NEU, said: ‘Our checklist incorporates and builds on the Government’s own toolkit for primary school wider opening. That is what makes our checklist rigorous.

‘It is designed for use when it is safe to open schools nationally. It sets out the standards which teachers, school staff and parents should expect to be met before the head teacher decides that the school is safe to open more widely.’

In an interview with BBC Newsnight on Monday evening, Tony Blair said the Government was adhering to scientific advice by preparing schools to open their doors again

He added: ‘Teachers and support staff will be responsible for ensuring safe practices are implemented, as young children will not be able to do so themselves. Parents would expect nothing less.’  

Health Secretary Matt Hancock looked to reassure the House of Commons on Monday, telling MPs only a ‘very small’ number of children were ‘badly affected’ by Covid-19.

Mr Blair backed up the comments, telling the BBC his own institute – the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change – had gathered data to show that ‘especially for younger children, the risks of transmission are actually quite low’.

He argued that private schools had been continuing to educate their pupils, while youngsters in the state system had been given ‘no education at all’ since schools were told to shut their gates on March 20 as the coronavirus outbreak took hold.

‘Let’s be clear, the private schools will have been educating their children throughout this,’ added Mr Blair, a father of four.

‘Parts of the state system will have been. But then there are some children who will have been having no education at all. You’ve got to get the schools back.’

Union leaders remain unconvinced with the argument put forward by ministers and Mr Blair, however.

Paul Whiteman, general secretary of school leaders’ union NAHT, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that teachers ‘haven’t yet seen the scientific underpin’ to back up the assertion that the transmission risk among pupils is low.

He has called on ministers to write to unions explaining the Government’s assessment. 

During the same interview, Mr Blair also gave his approval to the way Sir Keir Starmer has been leading Labour during the pandemic since his election as leader in April.

‘It’s changed for the better, for sure, in my view,’ Mr Blair said of the current state of the party.

‘Because it’s got a serious leadership that’s already making an impact because they’re showing competence, forensic skill, in dissecting the Government.

‘I think he’s done a very good job so far and I wish him every success.’

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