Pressing concrete scandal vote could reveal all at-risk colleges

And campaigners have insisted that kids’s schooling should not be wrecked once more by a return to dwelling education.

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On the eve of the return to lecture rooms, greater than 100 colleges throughout England have needed to shut buildings bolstered with “dangerous concrete” and convey again ­pandemic-era distant studying.

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Head lecturers and oldsters have been left scrambling to seek out village halls, church buildings and different neighborhood venues that could possibly be used as various lecture rooms.

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It is known that structural engineers will tomorrow be despatched to examine a whole lot of colleges. And it has been reported that as much as 7,000 at-risk colleges have but to be checked.

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Jake Berry, the previous Tory celebration chairman, has urged the Government “to build Nightingale schools around the country” much like the emergency hospitals arrange throughout Covid.

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Labour will search a vote on Wednesday ordering ministers to disclose the complete extent of Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Con­­crete, or RAAC, in class buildings.

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Schools Minister Nick Gibb has to this point pledged solely to publish a full record of affected colleges “in due course”.

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Shadow schooling secretary Bridget Phillipson mentioned: “Parents and the public have the right to know where public buildings affected by this are, what ministers knew about the risk posed to life and why they acted to intervene only days before the start of the term.”

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RAAC, which is 80 p.c air, was used as roof, wall and flooring slabs from the mid-50s to the mid-90s, when warnings it might out of the blue collapse emerged. It was additionally utilized in hos­pitals, courts and different public buildings.

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Former kids’s commissioner Anne Longfield mentioned that she fears children are being disrupted once more in a single day.

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She mentioned: “Children need the reassurance that they will be able to continue to attend school this month, even if the Government has to step in to find them new buildings.”

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Meanwhile, there are fears it might take years to repair the issues attributable to RAAC. Wayne Bates, nationwide negotiating official for lecturers’ union NASUWT, mentioned: “There’s a huge question mark about what the scale of this problem is.”

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And Dame Meg Hillier, Labour chair of the Public Accounts Committee, mentioned ­thousands and thousands of kilos, an “eye-watering and wasteful” sum, is being spent on mitigating the dangers in hospitals alone.

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