Minggu, 17 Mei 2020

Lockdown POLL: As schools row deepens, do you back June 1 return date for pupils? - Express

The back-to-school row has been simmering all week after the Government announced its plans to begin reopening schools as part of the gradual easing of coronavirus lockdown measures. Teaching unions have warned the planned return date is too soon and would put children, teachers and other school staff members at risk of contracting COVID-19. Some local authorities, including Liverpool City Council, have said they will not reopen schools on June 1.

The clear scientific and clinical advice is that it is safe to have schools reopen with social distancing

Michael Gove

But cabinet Office minister Michael Gove today issued a fresh appeal to teaching unions and to councils which oppose the move.

He said: "The clear scientific and clinical advice is that it is safe to have schools reopen accompanied with social distancing.

"Children only have one chance at education. Over the last decade we have made significant strides in closing the closing the gap between the richest and poorest in our schools. This lockdown has put that at risk.

"If progressive countries like Denmark can be teaching children and have them back in schools, then so should we. The whole point about being a teacher is you love your job. It is a mission, a vocation, to be able to excite young minds."

Back to school poll

Express.co.uk back-to-school poll (Image: GETTY)

Mr Gove said the R number - the transmission rate of the disease - remained below one, the level at which experts warn COVID-19 will begin to spread again exponentially.

He said the Government was on track to meet its target of getting 18,000 contact tracers by next week, with 17,200 now recruited.

As a result, the coronavirus test, track and trace programme would be up and running by the end of month, putting them in a stronger position to deal with any fresh outbreaks, he added.

READ MORE: Children to be tested for coronavirus to keep schools open

He said: "As we make progress - and we are making progress - in keeping the R rate below one and in reducing the number of infections, so if there is an outbreak we can test, track, trace and isolate so the situation is now better.

"We cannot have a situation where we keep our economy and our schools and our public services continually closed down because the health consequences of doing so would be malign as well."

The Government's plans received a boost from the Association of School and College Leaders which said it would now advise schools to begin reopening from June 1.

Primary school

Primary school pupils could be back in class on June 1 (Image: PA)

General secretary Geoff Barton said the body had been "reassured" by talks on Friday with Government scientific advisers.

But he warned some schools may need more time to put the necessary preparations in place.

He said: "If schools decide they are not ready to open at that time, or that they need to take a more phased approach such as using rotas, we will back them up on that decision."

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Schools

Ministers want primary schools to reopen on June 1 (Image: PA)

Other unions have said Friday's briefing raised more questions than answers and have welcomed an offer of further talks with Education Secretary Gavin Williamson.

Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner backed councils such as Liverpool which have said they will not reopen schools on June 1.

She said there were concerns among authorities in the north of England that the virus was still spreading there more quickly than elsewhere in the country.

She told The Andrew Marr Show: "We believe the R rate is higher in those areas, in those regions, so therefore we want the Government to publish the science behind it and provide the support.

"Councils want to make sure their citizens are safe. I support them in trying to do that."

Earlier, the Children's Commissioner for England, Anne Longfield, voiced her "despair" that the continued "squabbling" between ministers and unions was impacting on children's life chances.

Coronavirus lockdown

Coronavirus lockdown (Image: EXPRESS.CO.UK)

She said ways had to be found to managing the risks around coronavirus while an effective treatment or vaccine was found.

She said: "My worry within all that is that the needs of children and the best interests of children are disappearing from view."

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2020-05-17 13:00:50Z
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MAIL ON SUNDAY COMMENT - Daily Mail

MAIL ON SUNDAY COMMENT: From schools to tax, the Left is exploiting this crisis to push its own failed agenda. Mr Johnson MUST resist

We MUST not let the militant Left use the coronavirus to get what they want. 

All the zealots of tight state control and interference, the self-serving unions and the enthusiasts for taxing us until the pips squeak, see this epidemic as an opportunity.  Their motto is 'Never let a good crisis go to waste', and they are as good as their word.

But this country last December elected a Conservative Government headed by Boris Johnson. And while that Government has had to react decisively and with unprecedented measures to the spread of Covid-19, it was most definitely not swept into office by people who wanted a more socialist Britain.

Its election was a rejection, across the broadest possible front, of everything that Jeremy Corbyn stood for. That is why seats which had been held by Labour for a century tumbled into Tory hands. People wanted free enterprise, personal liberty, low taxation, Brexit and good government in general. 

They still want these things – though they understand very well that immediate and temporary priorities require that some of them should be laid aside for a short while. The key is that the temporary must not become the permanent. 

Pictured: Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer on
We MUST not let the militant Left use the coronavirus to get what they want, the Mail on Sunday believes (Pictured: Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer)

So Mr Johnson must be careful not to allow the national response to be hijacked and diverted by Corbynites, or by Blairites either. There is a conservative, sensible way of handling this, and it is the one he should follow.

One vital point at which this can be demonstrated is in the battle to reopen the schools. As The Mail on Sunday reports in detail today, any serious person must grasp that it is the underprivileged who are suffering most of all from the closure of our education system.

The independent schools make every effort to find room for pupils from poorer homes, but they cannot possibly substitute for the much larger state system. 

Yet while the private schools have made tough, well-organised arrangements to ensure serious disciplined home learning continues, many state schools seem to be failing to do anything effective at all. 

One parent of children attending one of the most prestigious state schools in the country found that her youngsters had received only two identifiable lessons, and that supervision and proper homework were virtually non-existent.

If this is happening in the best schools, imagine the position in those less favoured. If there is any serious monitoring of state schooling, there is little sign of it. And remember that in the less well-off homes of Britain, children often have no quiet space in which to work. They do not have laptops readily available, or even the good broadband necessary for serious home learning.

This country last December elected a Conservative Government headed by Boris Johnson (pictured). And while that Government has had to react decisively and with unprecedented measures to the spread of Covid-19, it was most definitely not swept into office by people who wanted a more socialist Britain

This country last December elected a Conservative Government headed by Boris Johnson (pictured). And while that Government has had to react decisively and with unprecedented measures to the spread of Covid-19, it was most definitely not swept into office by people who wanted a more socialist Britain

Pictured: Boris Johnson is joined on the doorstep of Number 10 by his fiancee, Carrie Symonds, to clap for carers on Thursday

Pictured: Boris Johnson is joined on the doorstep of Number 10 by his fiancee, Carrie Symonds, to clap for carers on Thursday

It is important to stress here that the damage being done is permanent. A Norwegian study has shown that time lost in schooling can seldom be recovered in later life. Every week of formal schooling lost now reduces the affected children's chances of going to university and lowers their lifetime potential earnings.

Meanwhile, the evidence also suggests that the dangers of coronavirus being passed on by children are tiny, while the dangers to the young are also small.

What person seriously concerned with the welfare of the poor – as the Left claim incessantly to be – cannot see that this is an unanswerable argument for a rapid reopening of the schools? 

Yet the main teachers' body, the National Education Union, which has long been a fortress of the Left, is not budging. And it is backed by the British Medical Association, by Liverpool City Council and by other predictably radical luminaries such as Baroness Chakrabarti.

All of them have lined up to help keep the disadvantaged children they claim to care about away from the schooling they so badly need. If this is the Left's true attitude to those it claims to represent, no wonder it is increasingly rejected at the polls. 

Interestingly, in SNP-run Scotland, where Left-wing ideas dominate and the Tory party is weak, the First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has flatly declared 'it is not going to be the case that schools are back to normal in any way, shape or form this side of the summer holidays'. 

This is one of many ways in which the devolved administrations of the UK have taken the opportunity of the virus crisis to push for more power at the expense of Westminster, or just to defy Downing Street.

Mr Johnson and his Education Secretary Gavin Williamson are absolutely right to fight against this unattractive alliance of dogma and self-interest, and for the freedom of children in England to get the education they need. But it is not only in the schools that radicals have sought to use the crisis for their own ends. 

Pictured: Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer holds up a print of a government document detailing coronavirus deaths in the UK and abroad during PMQs last week

Pictured: Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer holds up a print of a government document detailing coronavirus deaths in the UK and abroad during PMQs last week

London's Labour Mayor Sadiq Khan has managed to complain about reasonable conditions for a £1.6 billion government bailout for the capital's transport system. And admirers of green heroine Greta Thunberg see the lockdown as an opportunity to push for impractical anti-car and anti-flying measures, weirdly assuming that the effects of a national emergency can simply be continued when the country goes back to work.

Then there is the BBC, whose role in the crisis has been to take every opportunity to criticise the Government and to heap sycophantic praise on the new Labour leader and former lawyer Sir Keir Starmer. Do they even now not understand that this is not part of their job?

What did BBC News' political editor, Laura Kuenssberg, think she was doing when she tweeted of a clash between the PM and the Opposition leader that 'the lawyer' was 'beating the showman hands down'? Licence-fee payers do not part with their cash to finance partisan commentary of this kind. What they rightly expect of a BBC political editor is cool, impartial analysis backed by deep knowledge.

Could it be that the exceptional circumstances of the Covid-19 lockdown have caused Ms Kuenssberg and many of her colleagues to forget that the rules still apply? Or do they just think nobody will notice? If so, they badly need to be reminded that the BBC Charter and Agreement remain in place, and firmly require political impartiality from top to bottom.

All these Leftish campaigns must be resisted. But within the Government there is also some fighting to do. There is a danger of being carried away by the sense of urgency, in directions which Conservatives should resist. The extension of the furlough scheme to October announced last week may well have been a step too far in what the country can afford, or in what is wise. The absurd late imposition of quarantine on returning travellers – after weeks of inaction while such a measure might have been some use – could be the last straw for an airline industry which is genuinely on its knees.

In all directions, Boris Johnson needs to seize control of the agenda, not to let the liberal elite hijack the crisis for their own ends, and to ensure that the Britain that emerges from its current problems is, as nearly as it can be, the country which millions voted for last December.

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2020-05-17 10:39:30Z
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'Be honest!' Nicola Sturgeon under fire over 'coronavirus cover-up' - furious backlash - Express

The controversial claim comes from two Sottish companies who believe their employees contracted at a major conference in Edinburgh in February, days after it emerged Scotland's First Minister decided to keep news of the country's first infections from the public. The conference was organised by sportswear giant Nike. Despite knowing 25 delegates at the conference had positive for the disease, Ms Sturgeon still decided to keep the news secret, the BBC's Disclosure documentary revealed. The Scottish First Minister has said she did not reveal the news because of "patient confidentiality".

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One of the companies who believe their employees were infected shared an office with Nike in Glasgow, it emerged in the documentary that aired last week.

Another company that believes their employees risked their lives by attending the event after Ms Sturgeon new there were coronavirus cases in Scotland was a firm that fitted kilts on ten attendees of the event.

The Scottish Sunday Mail has now reported there was no "contact tracing" of staff in the impacted companies.

Public health experts have speculated the Nike event was Scotland's Covid-19 "ground zero".

READ MORE: Boris Johnson’s popularity makes Macron ‘green with envy’

"It acted too slowly and failed to inform other citizens at risk of infection."

Echoing this, Mr Murray, Labour MP for Edinburgh South, said: "The reason the public should have been told at the time is because of the potential impact on workers and businesses.

"Now it transpires workers at two companies with links to the conference may have been affected by the outbreak.

"They were kept in the dark by the Government and only know about the Nike outbreak because of a media investigation.

"If the Government had its way, this would remain a secret."

The event happened at Edinburgh's Hilton Carlton Hotel on February 26 and 27.

The Nike store in Glasgow that sent delegates was deep cleaned a full two weeks after the employees attended the event. No explanation was offered at the time as to why the whole store was being deep cleaned.

Ms Sturgeon insisted the allegations of a cover-up are only "highly politicised nonsense".

A Scottish Government spokesman said: "All appropriate steps were taken to ensure public health was protected.

"All cases linked to this event were assessed by their close contact or contact with conference delegates who tested positive after the event, so public health authorities were satisfied there was minimal infection risk.

"NHS Lothian and Edinburgh City Council worked with the venue to provide advice for close contacts of delegates and infection prevention and control considerations."

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2020-05-17 11:59:34Z
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Boris Johnson tells Tory MPs he wants to return to 'near-normality' by July - Daily Mail

Back to normal 'by July'? PM tells Tory MPs he wants to return to 'near-normality' in two months as he hails British 'good sense' over lockdown and announces £93m to open research centre early and fast-track coronavirus vaccine 

  • Boris Johnson told 100 of his colleagues via video link that will return country to normality by the end of July
  • But he said it will only happen in 'grandmother steps' and if Britons comply with current virus restrictions
  • PM says the public's 'perseverance' and 'good common sense' will enable country to 'inch' out of lockdown
  • He also said an Oxfordshire research centre will be opening a year ahead of schedule to fast-track a vaccine 
  • Mr Johnson's exclusive article will be seen as attempt to draw a line under recent chaotic days in Westminster
  • His address to the nation last Sunday left many confused about the rules as lockdown was eased across UK
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19
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Boris Johnson has told Tory MPs he wants to return to 'near-normality' in July as he hails British 'good sense' over the lockdown and announces £93million to bring forward the opening of a research centre to fast-track a coronavirus vaccine.

Speaking to 100 of his colleagues via video link, the Prime Minister said he would take 'grandmother steps' to ease the rules, but only if Britons comply with the current lockdown measures. He also confirmed that Commons discussions will resume on June 2. 

It comes as Mr Johnson declares British people's 'fortitude' will enable them to survive the Covid-19 crisis and regain 'the freedoms they hold dear'. 

He says that the epidemic has brought out 'the best in humanity' and that the public's 'perseverance' and 'good common sense' will enable the country to 'inch forwards' out of lockdown and towards 'much-missed normality'.

Writing in today's Mail on Sunday, Mr Johnson also announces that an Oxfordshire research centre will be opening a year ahead of schedule in an attempt to fast-track a vaccine against the coronavirus.

The Prime Minister says that the epidemic has brought out 'the best in humanity' and that the public's 'perseverance' and 'good common sense' will enable the country to 'inch forwards' out of lockdown and towards 'much-missed normality'

The Prime Minister says that the epidemic has brought out 'the best in humanity' and that the public's 'perseverance' and 'good common sense' will enable the country to 'inch forwards' out of lockdown and towards 'much-missed normality'

A group of anti-lockdown protesters are pictured above in Hyde Park. As part of the gradual relaxation, it is also understood that the Covid-19 taskforces in each Government department are being gradually wound-up over the coming weeks

A group of anti-lockdown protesters are pictured above in Hyde Park. As part of the gradual relaxation, it is also understood that the Covid-19 taskforces in each Government department are being gradually wound-up over the coming weeks

Visitors flock to Durdle Door in Dorset on a day of hot sunshine on the first weekend after the lockdown restrictions were eased. Boris Johnson said the plans will only take place if Britons comply with the current lockdown measures

Visitors flock to Durdle Door in Dorset on a day of hot sunshine on the first weekend after the lockdown restrictions were eased. Boris Johnson said the plans will only take place if Britons comply with the current lockdown measures

An MP listening in on the video call told The Sun: 'Boris told us he is determined that the country should be as close to normality again before the end of July.

'But he was clear that it all depends on the country meeting the conditions that have been set for tackling the virus.

'Most importantly that means bringing down the infection rate – and that can only be achieved if we continue to obey the rules on social distancing to help stop it spreading.' 

In other developments to the coronavirus crisis:

  • Britain announced 468 more coronavirus deaths on the first Saturday since lockdown was eased - taking the country's total fatalities to 34,466; 
  • Mr Johnson and the UK's top civil servant Sir Mark Sedwill are said to have clashed over who is responsible for implementing the Government's coronavirus plan;
  • A new Opinium survey showed public approval for the Government's handling of the crisis has fallen by nine points in a single week; 
  • Cafes, pubs and restaurants will be able to open as street stalls in weeks, in an attempt to boost the economy; 
  • Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) scientists are looking into new guidelines for how workers can cope with occasionally coming into contact with each other; 
  • Scuffles between police and anti-lockdown protestors broke out in Hyde Park and across the UK; 
  • The row between ministers and teachers' unions intensified after Children's Commissioner for England Anne Longfield said that schools had to be reopened as quickly as possible; 
  • Public Health England could face the axe after Boris Johnson told a meeting of 1922 Committee of backbench Tory MPs that he he was planning a review of 'a number of institutions' once coronavirus is beaten back; 
  • Experts from King's College London have suggested that one in three patients who fall severely ill with coronavirus develop deadly blood clots that trigger heart attacks, strokes and organ failure. 
  • China’s claims that the pandemic emerged from a wild animal market in Wuhan last December have been challenged by a landmark scientific study

The British government will invest up to £93million to accelerate construction of a new vaccines centre, the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy said on Saturday.

The funding will ensure the new centre opens in Summer 2021, a year ahead of schedule, the department said.

The Vaccines Manufacturing and Innovation Centre (VMIC), which is currently under construction, is a key component of the government's programme to ensure that once a coronavirus vaccine is available it can be rolled out quickly in mass quantities, the department said.

Mr Johnson's exclusive article will be seen as an attempt to draw a line under the chaotic days in Westminster which followed his televised address to the nation last Sunday, which left many people confused about the rules about meeting friends and family.

The Prime Minister clarifies today: 'You can now spend as much time as you like outdoors, for example sitting and enjoying the fresh air, picnicking, or sunbathing. You can meet one other person from a different household outdoors, provided you maintain social distancing. 

'You can exercise outdoors as often as you wish and play sport. Even with these changes, it's vital that people stay alert, keep their distance from others and carry on washing their hands regularly'.

Mr Johnson's remarks come as he is understood to have started work on a major speech to be delivered in the middle of next month, which will lay out his detailed plan to rebuild Britain after the crisis. 

One official involved in the work said that the speech would use the 'three pillars' of education, technology and infrastructure to set out his vision of a post-Covid Britain – although a senior source cautioned that it was 'far too early' to say what the speech would contain.

The Prime Minister is also battling to contain a series of territorial battles in his Cabinet over the response to the crisis, with Michael Gove at the centre of most of them. 

Mr Gove, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, has been engaged in a long-running turf war with Health Secretary Matt Hancock over issues such as the supply of medical equipment and protective kit.

Mr Hancock, in turn, has become increasingly fractious with colleagues from the Prime Minister downwards. 

Groups of people are pictured relaxing in St James's Park, London. It’s understood that there is major concern in the Cabinet that if the lockdown continues, more and more Britons will become paralysed by what they call ‘FOGO’ – fear of going out – making it even hard to get people back to work

Groups of people are pictured relaxing in St James's Park, London. It's understood that there is major concern in the Cabinet that if the lockdown continues, more and more Britons will become paralysed by what they call 'FOGO' – fear of going out – making it even hard to get people back to work

£93m vow to open vaccine lab early

Boris Johnson today announces the Government is investing £93 million to bring forward the opening of a pioneering new vaccine centre by a year.

The lab should now be open by summer 2021 with the hope it will be able to produce enough vaccines to serve the entire population by the end of next year.

Advisers say life in Britain will not return completely to normal until more than 70 per cent of the population have been immunised against the virus.

The new Vaccines Manufacturing And Innovation Centre in Oxfordshire will be the UK's first not-for-profit organisation to develop and advance the mass production of vaccines.

Before an effective vaccine is developed, Ministers are pinning their hopes on the roll-out of 'game-changing' antibody tests which will show who might have some form of immunity to Covid-19. Some estimates say that close to 20 million people could already be immune and be able to work and socialise as normal.

On Friday, President Donald Trump dubbed America's vaccine project 'Operation Warp Speed' and likened it to the Second World War effort to produce the world's first nuclear weapons.

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As The Mail on Sunday revealed last week, when Mr Johnson challenged him over progress towards the target of 100,000 Covid tests a day he shot back: 'That's not fair – give me a break'.

Sources say that Mr Gove has also argued privately that he, not Mr Hancock, should have oversight of plans to roll out the testing of anybody who enters the country.

The plans are an attempt to obviate the need to impose the controversial plan for all travellers, including British citizens, to be put into quarantine for 14 days after returning – something which is understood to have been resisted by Transport Secretary Grant Shapps, but backed by Mr Gove.

This newspaper has also learned that Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Mr Gove led a combined effort last Sunday evening to relax lockdown measures further. 

They were arguing late into the night for the PM to include the provision for friends and family members to meet in 'bubbles' – but they were overruled by Mr Johnson and Mr Hancock.

A Government source said: 'Bubbles were in and out at different points of the weekend hence why it was so unclear after Sunday.' 

It's understood that there is major concern in the Cabinet that if the lockdown continues, more and more Britons will become paralysed by what they call 'FOGO' – fear of going out – making it even hard to get people back to work.

Mr Johnson is also facing pressure from backbenchers to allow people to visit their closest family and loved ones. 

At a virtual meeting of the 1922 Committee on Friday, one MP told the PM that he had 'not hugged his girlfriend in seven weeks' and asked when he would be able to. The PM replied 'soon'.

As part of the gradual relaxation, it is also understood that the Covid-19 taskforces in each Government department are being gradually wound-up over the coming weeks.

Last night, Liberal Democrat MP Layla Moran said of Mr Johnson's lockdown exit plan: 'We don't just need this limited plan for renewal, we need to re-make a fairer and more liberal Britain.'

As well as Cabinet rows the Prime Minister and Sir Mark Sedwill, the UK's top civil servant, are said to have clashed last week over who is actually responsible for implementing the Government's coronavirus blueprint. 

The pair reportedly had a 'tense' moment as Mr Johnson listened to details of the plan being spelled out before asking: 'Who is in charge of implementing this delivery plan?'. 

A source told the Sunday Times there was then silence as the PM looked at Sir Mark and asked 'is it you?' to which the Cabinet Secretary apparently replied: 'No, I think it's you, prime minister.'

It came as a poll for the Observer showed public support for the Government's handling of the outbreak has slipped sharply.  

The survey by Opinium found 39 per cent backed the Government's response, down from 48 per cent a week ago.

The percentage of people saying they disapproved has risen from 36 per cent last week to 42 per cent.

It follows a week in which Mr Johnson faced criticism over his announcement of the easing of the lockdown restrictions in England.   

BORIS JOHNSON: Yes, it's more complex now. But we need to trust in the good sense of the British people...

By The Prime Minister Boris Johnson for The Mail on Sunday 

If 2020 has taught us anything, it is truly that the worst of times bring out the best in humanity. 

Every day brings heartbreaking news as more lives are lost before their time to this vicious coronavirus. 

Every victim leaves behind family, friends and loved ones who mourn their loss. They remain constantly in my thoughts; each death a spur to redouble our efforts to defeat this virus.

In this grab taken from video issued by Downing Street on Sunday, May 10, 2020, Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson delivers an address on lifting the country's lockdown amid the coronavirus pandemic

 In this grab taken from video issued by Downing Street on Sunday, May 10, 2020, Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson delivers an address on lifting the country's lockdown amid the coronavirus pandemic

We can only defeat it by acting together. In recent weeks we have seen phenomenal bravery, compassion and selflessness as people go above and beyond to protect the lives of others.

The staff in our care homes and NHS doing all they can to bring the sick back to health. Teachers helping critical workers go to work by looking after their children, while still teaching those at home. 

Police and prison officers keeping order on our streets and in our prisons. Those producing, processing, distributing and selling food. Engineers keeping the lights on and our broadband connected. 

Our Armed Forces rising to every logistical challenge with awesome professionalism. Civil servants working round the clock to implement every policy decision – all these people are putting others first.

They are the best of us, punctuating each day with a million acts of love and kindness. And their efforts have not been in vain for a simple reason – because the British people as a whole have risen so magnificently to the challenge we set: to stay at home.

The number of people admitted to hospital with Covid has steadily fallen. Despite predictions that critical care capacity would struggle to cope, the NHS was emphatically not overwhelmed. NHS workers are pictured above clapping for carers on Thursday

The number of people admitted to hospital with Covid has steadily fallen. Despite predictions that critical care capacity would struggle to cope, the NHS was emphatically not overwhelmed. NHS workers are pictured above clapping for carers on Thursday

New social distancing guidance for workers

Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) scientists are looking into how workers can cope with occasionally coming into contact with each other.

It comes amid concerns over how workers, such as those for construction, will maintain a two-metre distance.

Andrew Curran, chief scientific adviser at the Health and Safety Executive, said being near a person 'for a few seconds' at a one-metre distance could be the same as around an hour of being two metres away from them, according to The Telegraph. 

He added: 'If the exposure at a distance of less than two metres is going to be for a short period of time, you can manage the risk in the context of duration and orientation.' 

I don't underestimate how difficult it has been for everyone to be cut off from friends and parents, children and grandchildren, brothers and sisters.

Unable to visit places of worship or even just spend time with others. We thrive off social contact and having those we love around us – it's human nature. Yet those vital human connections have been cruelly denied to all of us by this insidious disease.

These enormous sacrifices have paid off. We have seen the number of positive cases plateau and fall, even as testing capacity has increased tenfold.

The number of people admitted to hospital with Covid has steadily fallen. Despite predictions that critical care capacity would struggle to cope, the NHS was emphatically not overwhelmed.

I made clear from the outset that we can only make changes to the lockdown when it is safe to do so, guided by science. We set five tests, of which three have been met and progress is being made on the remaining two. 

We are setting up a system of Covid-19 alert levels, which will be overseen by a new UK Joint Biosecurity Centre designed to assess the spread of the virus and inform decisions over how we lift the lockdown.

It is the British public's fortitude, their perseverance, their good common sense and their desire to return to the freedoms they hold dear that has allowed us to inch forwards.

We have announced new rules on what people can and cannot do in England.

The staff in our care homes and NHS doing all they can to bring the sick back to health. Teachers helping critical workers go to work by looking after their children, while still teaching those at home. A care worker is pictured wearing PPE while conducting a home visit in Scunthorpe

You can now spend as much time as you like outdoors, for example sitting and enjoying the fresh air, picnicking or sunbathing. You can meet one other person from a different household outdoors, provided you maintain social distancing. You can exercise outdoors as often as you wish and play sport.

Even with these changes, it's vital that people stay alert, keep their distance from others and carry on washing their hands regularly.

These changes are possible because the evidence shows that the risk of transmission is significantly lower outdoors.

Being able to see a friend or family member at a safe distance, in a park or at the end of the road, provides significant benefits to our physical and mental wellbeing – but crucially, it does not risk reversing the gains we have so far won in the fight against the virus. I am confident the balance of risk, taking everything into account, means we can safely make this change.

Now that we have driven the rate of infection down, and there are fewer infections, some people can also start returning to work. We have held extensive talks with employers, trade unions and the devolved administrations about how to make workplaces safe. 

You can now spend as much time as you like outdoors, for example sitting and enjoying the fresh air, picnicking or sunbathing. You can meet one other person from a different household outdoors, provided you maintain social distancing. A man is pictured relaxing in Victoria Park, London

You can now spend as much time as you like outdoors, for example sitting and enjoying the fresh air, picnicking or sunbathing. You can meet one other person from a different household outdoors, provided you maintain social distancing. A man is pictured relaxing in Victoria Park, London

The Covid-19 secure guidelines we developed together mean we can encourage people who can't work from home to go to their place of work in a safe way.

The message is: work from home if you can but travel to work if you can't. And avoid public transport if you can, but use it if you have no other choice.

No earlier than June, we hope to move to step two, opening schools to more children and reopening some shops. And no earlier than July, we can move to step three, opening parts of the leisure and hospitality sectors. 

Cafes, pubs and restaurants to re-open as street stalls within weeks

Cafes, pubs and restaurants will be able to re-open as street stalls within a matter of weeks, as coronavirus lockdown restrictions are eased.

It comes as part of an attempt to flow cash back into high street businesses, ahead of the opening of pubs.

The plans are part of a measure for business that already have licences for outdoor seating. 

The Prime Minister is also thought to allow the temporary easing of Sunday trading laws to help revive the economy.

A Whitehall source said it may trigger a 'more vibrant style of continental town centres in the summer', according to The Telegraph. 

Meanwhile, small church weddings could also take place by July. 

Over time we can gradually get closer to a kind of normality – but only if the evidence shows these adjustments are compatible with our five tests. And if at any stage we need to tighten the restrictions, we will not hesitate to act. Nothing is more important than saving lives.

I understand people will feel frustrated with some of the new rules. We are trying to do something that has never had to be done before – moving the country out of a full lockdown, in a way which is safe and does not risk sacrificing all of your hard work. I recognise what we are now asking is more complex than simply staying at home, but this is a complex problem and we need to trust in the good sense of the British people.

If we all stick at it, then we'll be able, gradually, to get rid of the complexities and the restrictions and make it easier and simpler for families to meet again. But we must move slowly, and at the right time.

I want to thank you personally for sticking with us and – most of all – for being so patient. And I want to reassure you that there is a route out of this.

In the darkness of March, I said that with hard work, we could turn the tide within three months. We have now passed through the peak.

I said, if we could get an antibody test showing whether you have had the disease, it would be a huge step forward. Public Health England has now approved an antibody test which is 100 per cent accurate.

I said we would throw everything we could at finding a vaccine. There remains a very long way to go, and I must be frank that a vaccine might not come to fruition. But we are leading the global effort.

Some of the most promising research into vaccines is happening here in the UK, and this weekend we are announcing a £93 million investment to open the new Vaccine Manufacturing And Innovation Centre a full 12 months ahead of schedule.

We are also supporting research into drug treatments which can bring as many people as possible who have caught the virus back to full health.

Despite these efforts, we have to acknowledge we may need to live with this virus for some time to come. We need to find new ways to control the virus. 

We will do that through testing and tracing: testing individuals who have symptoms to see if they have the virus and tracing contacts who may have been infected.

The NHS app and an army of contact tracers will help us alert anyone who may have caught the virus. 

By asking them to self-isolate, we will help them protect their friends, family and loved ones, while stopping the spread of the virus in the wider community.

By screening arrivals at sea-ports and airports and introducing quarantine measures, we will be able to keep the number of infections at low levels, and we can give everyone else more freedom to lead their lives as normally as possible.

We have achieved a lot together so far. Let's not throw it all away. In return for the small freedoms we are now allowing ourselves, we must stay alert. We must do so in the knowledge our self-discipline will, eventually, lead to the return of our much-missed normality.

I know this will not be easy – the first baby steps never are. But I hope that, when we look back, the changes we have made during this last week will be seen as an important moment on the road to our nation's recovery.

Revealed: PM's private text talks with Macron 

By Harry Cole, Deputy Political Editor for the Mail on Sunday

Emmanuel Macron and Boris Johnson and spent a weekend exchanging private WhatsApp messages about allowing quarantine-free travel between Britain and France – blindsiding officials on both sides of the Channel, who had been kept out of the loop.

The Mail on Sunday has learnt the Prime Minister and French President regularly converse over the messaging service, away from the prying eyes of aides.

They were in touch throughout last weekend, which led to an unexpected announcement on Sunday evening that travellers from France would not be subject to the same 14-day quarantine as anyone else arriving in the UK.

The Mail on Sunday has learnt the Prime Minister and French President regularly converse over the messaging service, away from the prying eyes of aides

The Mail on Sunday has learnt the Prime Minister and French President regularly converse over the messaging service, away from the prying eyes of aides

Just 20 minutes after Mr Johnson announced the draconian measure for all visitors in his televised address to the nation on Sunday, Downing Street said: 'No quarantine measures would apply to travellers coming from France at this stage; any measures on either side would be taken in a concerted and reciprocal manner.'

However, by the end of the week, the Government had made an apparent U-turn over the exemption.

After the EU warned about singling out one member of the bloc, No 10 officials claimed the statement had been misinterpreted. 

They pointed out it merely said there was no quarantine 'at this stage' – which is true of travellers from all nations as the measures are not expected until the end of the month – and stressed 'there is no exemption agreed with France'.

However, Ministers are scrambling to keep the vital cross-Channel trade route flowing.

A Government source admitted: 'Boris and Macron overcooked it a bit with the WhatsApp diplomacy.'

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2020-05-17 10:12:21Z
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Head teachers insist primary schools SHOULD reopen in June breaking ranks with teachings unions - The Sun

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HEAD teachers are now backing the reopening of schools on June 1 as pressure is growing on unions over their refusal to let kids back to class.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled plans to let the first children back to school at the start of next month but faced a push back from some teachers.

⚠️ Read our coronavirus live blog for the latest news & updates

 An empty classroom at Vaughan Primary School, Harrow, London

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An empty classroom at Vaughan Primary School, Harrow, LondonCredit: Rex Features

The head teachers' union the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL) has now said it will be advising its members to reopen schools on June 1, reports The Sunday Times.

It comes after its leaders met with the government's chief medical officer and chief scientific officer on Friday.

Other teaching unions have advised their members to not engage with the government's plans.

Ministers hope reopening schools will be a key step in getting Britain moving again as the country emerges from almost two months of coronavirus lockdown.

It is part of the second step in the government's three stage plan - with Mr Johnson laying out last weekend he hopes reception, year one and year six will return on June 1.

Critics of the plan have warned it is too early to send kids back as infection rates remain too high, with the National Education Union calling the plan "reckless".

Some plans are also being drawn up to have schools open throughout the holidays with "summer camps" to get kids' education back on track.

However, a survey revealed almost 700,000 state pupils are receiving no home lessons amid the lockdown.

In a poll of 900 heads across England, conducted by The Key, an information service for heads and governors, they found approaches were varying wildly across the country, reports The Mail on Sunday.

Extrapolating the results, it would mean around 335,580 primary children and 342,475 secondary children are in schools that are not setting any work.

The Campaign for Real Education said it was "outrageous and immoral" and said disadvantaged children risk being "thrown on the scrap heap".

 Signage outside the closed West Bridgford Infants School in Nottingham

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Signage outside the closed West Bridgford Infants School in NottinghamCredit: PA:Press Association
 Children's PE bags hang on coat hooks at Oldfield Brow Primary School during the coronavirus lockdown

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Children's PE bags hang on coat hooks at Oldfield Brow Primary School during the coronavirus lockdownCredit: Getty Images - Getty

The National Association of Head Teachers has also suggested it would back reopening primaries if it was given the government’s full scientific advice.

Five former education secretaries - Labour's Alan Johnson and Charles Clarke, along with Tories Nicky Morgan, Damian Hinds and Justine Greening - have also backed the phased reopening of schoools.

Other countries in Europe have already begun to reopen their schools, such as Denmark, France and Germany.

Ms Morgan said: "We know that there are children who rely on school for their hot meals and for teachers to be able to keep an eye on certain pupils to stop them coming to harm.

"Neither of these two things is currently happening."

Ms Greening added: "Despite many parents’ best efforts to keep education going in difficult circumstances, this time out of school will create an even bigger opportunity gap later.

"Our children and young people need to be back in school and other countries like Denmark show that it’s possible to put in place a workable plan."

Parents however remain fearful of sending their kids back to school, with 81 per cent of 20,000 surveyed by childcare.co.uk saying they will not send their kids back to school next month.

The government has already said it will not impose fines on those mums and dads who continue to keep their children out school due to the coronavirus.

According to the Office for National Statistics, 26 teachers and 10 teaching assistants have died of Covid-19 in England and Wales

Questions have been asked over how social distancing will work in schools - with them likely to have staggered start times and smaller classes.

Gavin Williamson, the education secretary, said: "There is a consequence to this, the longer the schools close the more children miss out.

“Teachers know that there are children out there that have not spoken or played with another child their own age for the last two months.”

Deputy chief medical officer Dr Jenny Harries confirms that kids will be allowed to take lunch boxes back to school but not pencil cases

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2020-05-17 09:47:24Z
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