school dress

There’s a question mark whether children have to return to Isle of Wight schools on 1st June

Following on from this morning’s news when education unions expressed their view that Isle of Wight schools were not ready to reopen on 1st June, Cllr Paul Brading confirmed to News OnTheWight that the choice to send their children in Reception, Year One and Year Six back to school lays with parents.

Cllr Brading said that for local authority schools (most of primaries) the decision to open a school would be the council’s, after discussions with the Headteacher.

However, he added,

“It will be parental choice whether pupils in these three years return on 1st June.  It is recommended that they do, but not compulsory.

“As it’s parental choice at present obviously fine will not apply.”

Questions over risk assessments
The news surfaced following a thread of emails seen by News OnTheWight between teacher and Green Party national education spokesperson, Vix Lowthion, and Cllr Paul Brading, the cabinet member responsible for education.

Ms Lowthion had questioned who is overseeing whether schools will be safe, adding that the public must know that our Council takes this very seriously, well in advance of the bell on the 1st June.

Brading: Checks are ongoing and would continue
Cllr Brading confirmed that officers have been working closely with all schools to ensure they are all fully prepared and meet the requirements to open.

He added that he and all the officers take safeguarding very seriously and confirmed that to ensure all pupils and staff are kept safe, checks were ongoing, and would continue over the coming weeks and months.

Cllr Brading disputed a claim by Ms Lowthion that “a good deal of pressure” had been put on Headteachers and governors to open their doors.

Lowthion: Confidence and trust is what we need right now
Ms Lowthion told News OnTheWight,

“If the IW Council feels that our schools are safe to open, then they should be confident enough to declare it. But that can surely only happen through evidence and if the schools have been visited by the Local Authority or the risk assessments for each school have been assessed.

“If these assessments are not carried through, then the public can only conclude that the Council do not know whether the schools are safe. Ignorance does not breed confidence and trust – and confidence and trust is what we need right now.”

Image: barneymoss under CC BY 2.0