Rabu, 10 Juni 2020

Boris Johnson announces 'support bubble' plan of combining households - Guardian News

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  1. Boris Johnson announces 'support bubble' plan of combining households  Guardian News
  2. PM frees millions of couples to visit their partners and allows lone grandparents to see families  Daily Mail
  3. Boris Johnson announces lockdown 'bubbles' letting two households hug and kiss  Mirror Online
  4. Support bubble: What is a support bubble? Who can meet?  Express
  5. 'Support bubble' plan lets people living alone in England combine households  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-06-10 17:43:53Z
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Coronavirus: Number of deaths 'could have been halved if lockdown introduced a week earlier' - Sky News

Coronavirus deaths could have been reduced "by at least half" if the UK had gone into lockdown a week earlier, one of government's former key advisers has told MPs.

Professor Neil Ferguson, of London's Imperial College, said he believed the right decisions were taken by ministers over COVID-19 but questioned whether they were taken at the right time.

He told the House of Commons science committee of MPs: "The epidemic was doubling every three to four days before lockdown interventions were introduced.

"So, had we introduced lockdown measures a week earlier, we would have reduced the final toll by at least a half."

Professor Neil Ferguson. Pic: Marshaj2020
Image: Professor Neil Ferguson questioned whether decisions were taken at the right time

He continued: "Whilst I think the measures, given what we knew about this virus then in terms of its transmission and its lethality, were warranted - I wouldn't second-guess them at this point - certainly had we introduced them earlier, we would have seen many fewer deaths."

Prof Ferguson said he estimated that the number of deaths directly caused by coronavirus would be more than 50,000, meaning 25,000 lives could have been saved by going into lockdown a week earlier.

In March, Prof Ferguson estimated that the pandemic would cause at most 20,000 deaths.

More from Covid-19

He told MPs that scientists had "underestimated how far into the epidemic this country was" in March.

He also said government advisers did not anticipate how high deaths in care homes would be, as they acted on the assumption that residents would be shielded.

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According to Department of Health figures, a further 245 people in the UK have died with coronavirus as of 5pm on Tuesday, taking the total to 41,128 deaths.

The figures from the Department of Health cover coronavirus-related deaths in all settings, including hospitals, care homes and the community.

The daily figures for each UK nation are:

  • Scotland - 12 new deaths - total 2,434
  • Northern Ireland - 0 new deaths - total remains 537
  • England - 88 new deaths - total hospital deaths 27,707
  • Wales - nine new deaths - total 1,419

Individual health authorities in the home nations collate their numbers at different times throughout the day and so they may not tally up to the UK government's overall daily total.

Ed Conway examines the latest coronavirus data
'Good and bad' news from latest coronavirus data

Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced lockdown measures on 23 March.

Prof Ferguson played a leading role in advising the government during the early stages of the pandemic, before being forced to leave the scientific advisory group SAGE after being caught breaking lockdown rules.

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2020-06-10 15:27:43Z
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Coronavirus: Single people can stay the night with loved ones, PM says - BBC News

Media playback is unsupported on your device

People living alone in England will be able to stay at one other household as part of a further easing of coronavirus restrictions.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that, from Saturday, single adults can spend the night at another house in a "support bubble".

No 10 said the change aims to help combat loneliness and that people are being trusted to observe the rules.

The relaxation does not apply to those who are shielding, or other UK nations.

Mr Johnson told the daily Downing Street briefing the new rule applies to single adult households or single parents with children under 18.

"All those in a support bubble will be able to act as if they live in the same household, meaning they can spend time together inside each others' homes and do not need to stay two metres apart," he said.

He added: "I want to stress that support bubbles must be exclusive, meaning you can't switch the household you are in a bubble with or connect with multiple households.

"And if any member of the support bubble develops symptoms, all members of the bubble will need to follow the normal advice on household isolation."

In addition to the new "support bubbles", the PM also confirmed non-essential shops can reopen on 15 June alongside outdoor zoos and safari parks.

How might "support bubbles" work?

The government gave examples for how the new "support bubbles" might work for single adults in England:

  • A grandparent who lives alone would be able to form a bubble with one of their children, which means they could go to see them and interact with their grandchildren as normal
  • A single parent could form a bubble with a parent or friend so they can interact as normal
  • Two single people who both live on their own could form a bubble
  • And a couple who do not live together could form a bubble, but only if they both live alone

No 10 also said that if a person lives alone but their partner has a flatmate, for example, then they can form a bubble but the flatmate cannot then form their own with another household.

If anyone within a bubble develops coronavirus symptoms, everyone within the bubble must self-isolate for 14 days.

Who can't create a "support bubble"?

Mr Johnson said the new rule is "not designed for people who don't qualify to start meeting inside because that remains against the law".

One part of the bubble has to be a single household, or be a single parent to children under 18.

It does not apply to grandparents who live together, people living in houses of multiple occupancy, such as flat shares, or to couples who already live together.

Those who are shielding cannot be advised to form a bubble, the PM said.

He added: "However, I want to say I know how hard it is for those of you who are shielding and we will say more next week about the arrangements that will be in place for you beyond the end of June."

The UK government's chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance said the R number - the number of people an infected person passes the virus on to - remains "just below one".

"The epidemic is shrinking, but not fast," he said. "Numbers are coming down but are not yet very low."

Mr Johnson confirmed there have been a further 245 coronavirus deaths across all settings in the UK, taking the UK death toll to 41,128.

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2020-06-10 16:15:17Z
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George Floyd protests: Activists draw up hit list of UK statues they want removed - Sky News

Activists have drawn up a list of statues they want to see removed as anti-racism protests continue across the UK.

Monuments of former prime ministers such as William Gladstone and Sir Robert Peel, as well as English sea captains James Cook and Sir Francis Drake, are listed as targets.

They feature on a website called "Topple the Racists", to which the public can add their suggestions - and an interactive map gives the locations as well as a description of each memorial.

Prof Geoffrey Palmer, Heriot-Watt University
'A slow removal of black history'
Elihu Yale
Image: The Elihu Yale, a Wetherspoons pub, in Wrexham, Wales, could be renamed

It includes demands for the renaming of pubs and institutions linked to Britain's colonial past, and streets named after East India company senior figures - as well as the removal of a statue of Robert Clive (aka Clive of India), who spearheaded the trading enterprise.

The site reads: "We believe these statues and other memorials to slave-owners and colonialists need to be removed so that Britain can finally face the truth about its past - and how it shapes our present."

Statue of Cecil Rhodes at  Oxford University's Oriel College
Image: A statue of Cecil Rhodes at Oxford University's Oriel College
Canning Road
Image: The East India Estate Conservation Area in Croydon includes Canning Road

Demonstrations supporting the Black Lives Matter movement have been taking place across the UK since the death of George Floyd during his arrest by a white police officer in the US two weeks ago.

There have since been increasing demands to remove the legacy of racism and colonialism from institutions, including monuments of controversial historical figures.

More from Black Lives Matter

Some of the monuments which feature on the list have already been taken down.

A statue of slave owner Robert Milligan at West India Quay, east London, has been removed
Image: A statue of slave owner Robert Milligan at West India Quay, east London, has been removed
The statue comes down in Bristol. Pic: Artemis D Bear
Bristol protesters pull down slave trader statue

The figure of Robert Milligan was taken down from its plinth at West India Quay in the Docklands on Tuesday - two days after campaigners tore down a statue of a slave trader Edward Colston in Bristol.

Bristol City Council has said the statue will be retrieved from the harbour and exhibited at a local museum, with the protesters having rolled it from its original site and dumped it in the water.

Home Secretary Priti Patel said the toppling of the statue was "utterly disgraceful", while Professor Geoff Palmer, a professor emeritus in the School of Life Sciences at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, told Sky News he was not a supporter of the removal of historical monuments.

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Professor Palmer said: "Once a statue has come down, what do you do next?

"What I am concerned about is in 100 years you look back and somebody says, 'who is Colston?', and therefore I think removing history - one should consider it very carefully.

"I think it's a slow removal of history, and part of that is black history."

A caricature of a black man's head, which had a "save me" sign around it, was removed by the public for "safekeeping" from an 18th century pub sign in Ashbourne, Derbyshire.

Council workers clean graffiti from a statue of Queen Victoria in Woodhouse Moor, Leeds
Image: Council workers clean graffiti from a statue of Queen Victoria in Woodhouse Moor, Leeds
A sign saying 'Save Me' was seen hanging on a sign for the Greenman pub in Ashbourne, Derbyshire, before the head was removed
Image: A sign saying 'Save Me' was seen hanging on a sign for the Greenman pub in Ashbourne, Derbyshire, before the head was removed

The protests have also reignited a campaign for a statue of British imperialist Cecil Rhodes to be removed from an Oxford University college.

A statue of coloniser Christopher Columbus in London's Belgravia is another target on the hit list.

Campaigners say they also want to see Beckford School in North London, which is named after slave owner William Beckford, renamed.

Guy's Hospital near London Bridge is also named, which was founded in 1721 by Sir Thomas Guy, who made his fortune through investment in the South Sea Company, whose main purpose was to sell slaves to the Spanish Colonies.

‘Churchill was a racist’ written on statue
'Churchill was a racist' written on statue
Guy's Hospital
Image: Activists want Guy's Hospital to be renamed

A petition has also been launched to rename The Elihu Yale, a Wetherspoons pub in Wrexham, Wales, named after a slave trader and official for the East India Company in Madras.

Several monuments have also been vandalised during the protests, including a statue of Queen Victoria in Woodhouse Moor, Leeds, and that of former prime minister Winston Churchill in London's Parliament Square.

Sir Francis Drake's statue Plymouth Road Tavistock Devon
Image: Sir Francis Drake's statue in Tavistock, Devon, is on the list

It comes as Labour councils across England and Wales pledged to begin reviewing such monuments in their areas.

It follows a similar decision by the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, after his office announced that the newly-formed Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm will review landmarks in the capital - including murals, street art, street names, statues and other memorials.

Nelson's Column towers over Trafalgar Square in central London
London landmarks review after protests

Race and Revolution: Is Change Going to Come?

Sky News will broadcast a global debate show on Tuesday night at 8pm - looking at the issues raised by the Black Lives Matter protests, and examining institutional racism and how we fix it.

If you would like to be part of our virtual audience, and have a chance of putting a question to our panel, please send your name, location and question to newsdebates@sky.uk

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2020-06-10 14:39:49Z
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George Floyd protests: Boris Johnson offers no criticism of Donald Trump and says US a 'bastion of freedom' - Sky News

Boris Johnson offered no criticism of Donald Trump and claimed the US is a "bastion of peace and freedom" as he was quizzed about the global Black Lives Matter protests.

Amid continuing demonstrations across the UK and the rest of the world over the killing of George Floyd in America, the prime minister reiterated his view that the death of the 46-year-old was "absolutely appalling".

But, challenged over Mr Trump's response to the killing, Mr Johnson only stressed the role of the US as Britain's "most important ally in the world".

George Floyd's niece asks: 'When was America ever great?'
George Floyd family challenges Trump's slogan

He also defended the use of "very important" stop and search in the UK despite being urged to end the "pain and injustice" of Section 60 powers.

During Wednesday's PMQs, SNP MP Kirsty Blackman branded the response of Mr Trump to Mr Floyd's killing and the Black Lives Matter movement as "horrendous".

Referencing previous comments by Mr Johnson, she asked the prime minister whether he still believed the US president has "many, many good qualities".

Mr Johnson replied: "I renew what I have said many times, because it's important for the House to hear it again, yes black lives matter and, yes, the death of George Floyd was absolutely appalling.

More from Black Lives Matter

"As for the qualities of Mr Trump, let me say he has, amongst many other things, he is president of the United States, which is our most important ally in the world today.

"And whatever people may say about it, whatever those on the Left may say about it, the United States is a bastion of peace and freedom and has been for most of my lifetime."

During his appearance in the House of Commons, the prime minister was also urged to abolish stop and search powers, which the government plans to enhance in new legislation.

Police stop and search
Image: The PM defended the use of stop and search powers

Liberal Democrat acting leader Sir Ed Davey said: "Under suspicionless stop and search powers, which this government is expanding, a black person is 47 times more likely to be stopped and searched than a white person.

"On too many occasions, stop and search seems to mean being black is enough to be suspected of being a criminal."

He asked the prime minister to "abolish suspicionless stop and search powers and end the pain and injustice they wreak on so many people in Britain's black and minority communities".

In response, Mr Johnson said it was "very important" that stop and search is "carried out sensitively and in accordance with the law" as he hailed the "great difference" made by police wearing body cameras.

But he added Section 60 powers "can be very important in fighting violent crime".

"I'm afraid what has been happening in London with knife crime has been completely unacceptable," he told MPs.

"I do believe stop and search, amongst many other things, can be a very important utensil in fighting knife crime.

"It does work. It worked for us when I was running London and it must work now.

"I'm not saying it's the whole answer, he's right. It's not the whole answer but it's part of the mix."

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Earlier, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer told the prime minister there had been "precious little action" despite at least seven reports into racial inequality in the last three years.

Mr Johnson said he "understands the very strong and legitimate feelings of people in this country" at Mr Lloyd's death.

And he added the government was "getting on" with the implementation of recommendations by Labour MP David Lammy's government-commissioned report into the justice system.

But he stressed "it is absolutely vital, at the same time, that we keep our streets safe and we back our police".

Race and Revolution: Is Change Going to Come?

Sky News will broadcast a global debate show on Tuesday night at 8pm - looking at the issues raised by the Black Lives Matter protests, and examining institutional racism and how we fix it.

If you would like to be part of our virtual audience, and have a chance of putting a question to our panel, please send your name, location and question to newsdebates@sky.uk

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2020-06-10 13:37:14Z
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Millions of children might not be able to go back to school in SEPTEMBER - Daily Mail

'So kids can go to shops, McDonald's, the zoo, but not to school?' Furious parents blast government's U-turn as ministers admit millions of children might not return even in SEPTEMBER amid calls for Nightingale-style classrooms

  • Ministers axed getting all primary pupils back for a month before summer break
  • Government conceded may not be possible for all pupils to return in September
  • Tory MPs demanding a route map warning huge damage being done to children
  • Estimated 700,000 children doing no work at home and don't have computers 
  • Boris Johnson to confirm later that zoos and drive-in cinemas open from Monday

Ministers are facing fury today after it emerged millions of children might not be able to go back to school full-time in September - despite zoos and drive-in cinemas opening from Monday.  

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson admitted yesterday that the 'ambition' of getting all primary age children back in class for a month before the summer break had been ditched just weeks after it was set. 

And Government sources refused to confirm that all pupils at either primary or secondary schools will be able to go back full-time after the holidays, merely saying they hoped 'more' could return. 

Children's Commissioner Anne Longfield accused ministers of 'furloughing childhood', while parents voiced anger that non-essential shops, McDonald's and zoos are reopening before most schools. Former chief inspector of schools Michael Wilshaw said the government's approach had been a 'mess' and was fuelling a 'tragedy' for young people. 

Tory MPs are among those who have demanded a route map to get children back to school. Robert Halfon, chair of the education select committee, warned that 700,000 of the most vulnerable pupils were doing no work at home at all and many do not even have access to computers, predicting an 'epidemic of educational poverty' without more assistance.

Meanwhile, there is pressure for a Nightingale hospitals-style operation to use community halls and churches as temporary classrooms. 

But business minister Nadhim Zahawi complained that those who were criticising the government for not reopening schools have previously accused them of moving too fast.  

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson admitted yesterday that the 'ambition' of getting all primary age children back in class for a month before the summer break had been ditched just weeks after it was set

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson admitted yesterday that the 'ambition' of getting all primary age children back in class for a month before the summer break had been ditched just weeks after it was set

A socially-distanced class at work at Landywood Primary School in Staffordshire this week

A socially-distanced class at work at Landywood Primary School in Staffordshire this week

Mr Murray said his teenage daughter had been invited to an end-of-year picnic despite having no lessons while the school remains closed. Pictured: Reception pupils from Landywood Primary School in Staffordshire take part in a socially-distanced outdoor exercise

Mr Murray said his teenage daughter had been invited to an end-of-year picnic despite having no lessons while the school remains closed. Pictured: Reception pupils from Landywood Primary School in Staffordshire take part in a socially-distanced outdoor exercise 

Schoolchildren have 'tiny' one in 3.5m chance of dying from coronavirus 

School children under the age of 15 have a 'tiny' one-in-3.5 million chance of dying from coronavirus, according to statistics.

Analysis of data from the Office for National Statistics by scientists from the University of Cambridge shows that the coronavirus risk to children is extremely low.

The death rate for youngsters aged five to 14 in England and Wales is one in 3.5 million and for under-5s it is one in 1.17 million.

Official data shows that only 14 people aged under 19 have died with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak. No children aged between 5-9 have lost their lives to the virus.

In comparison, between 30 and 60 people are hit by lightning every year in the UK, according to the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents.

This is a risk of between one in 2.21 million and one in 1.1 million each year, the Daily Telegraph reported, although it was unclear how many people hit by lightning are children.

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The Government's two-metre social distancing rules and advice from Public Health England – that class sizes should be limited to 15 – are believed to be the major obstacles to getting more children back. 

Mr Johnson is coming under growing pressure to ease the rules. 

SAGE adviser Shaun Fitzgerald of Cambridge University, who helped draw up the rule, told the Times that there should be more focus on how long people are close together any whether they are facing towards each other. 

'The thing which is missing from a simple two-metre rule is consideration of other factors, such as time, duration and orientation,' he said. 

'It's all three that are important. I would not want to be 1 meter apart from somebody for an extended period because that's much, much higher risk than two metres. 

'But being less than two metres for a short period and I'm not facing that person are ameliorating factors. If things evolve, it isn't necessarily because the evidence is any different.'  

Professor Robert Dingwall, a member of one of the sub-groups feeding into the Government's SAGE committee, said that even if the distance was cut to one metre, there would still be a 'safety margin' as it was 'very rare' for virus particles to travel that far.

A study published in the Lancet found physical distancing of at least one metre lowers the risk of coronavirus transmission, but distances of two metres could be more effective.

But Prof Dingwall told BBC Radio 4's Today programme it was a 'problematic' study because it did not look at the economic consequences of having a larger distance requirement.

'I think it's a question of relative risk. Even the problematic Lancet study that was published last week was really saying you're moving from a tiny risk at two metres to a very small risk at one metre.

'You have to set that against all the other harms that are being done by the, the economic devastation that is wreaked by the two-metre rule, the deaths that will be attributable to the lockdown itself, and to the social and economic disruption that is causing.'

The PM will front the Downing Street briefing this evening and is expected to confirm zoos, safari parks and drive-in cinemas can reopen in England from June 15.

It comes a day after Business Secretary Alok Sharma confirmed shops would also be able to reopen on the same day as the Government seeks to kick-start the economy.

But Mr Williamson was forced to admit defeat over plans for all primary pupils in England to attend classes before the summer break. 

In a round of interviews today, Mr Zahawi said the government's 'ultimate aim' was to have a full return to school by September.

He added: 'The same voices that last week were supporting people who are saying do not open up the schools are this week criticising us for saying we will take it deliberately carefully.'

Challenged on why there was not a Nightingale-style plan to mobilise class space, Mr Zahawi insisted the government was working 'as quickly and deliberately as we can'.

Rishi Sunak has warned school closures are as damaging to the economy as the 2008 credit crunch, it was claimed today.

The Chancellor is believed to be among the most hawkish in government on the need to reopen schools. 

He has privately told colleagues that the impact of keeping millions of pupils at home is the same scale as the financial crisis, which required nearly £140billion in taxpayer bailouts, according to the Telegraph.

Treasury sources dismissed the report as 'categorically not true'. Speaking on a visit to a John Lewis store this morning, Mr Sunak said: 'I personally think every day our children are not at school is a tragedy.' 

He added: 'Last month we set out a clear plan to reopen our country slowly and today we're at the next stage of that plan where next week we'll be able to open shops again in our country.

'And that's because we've met the five tests that we set out.

'I hope that when all these shops open people should have the confidence to know that they can go out again in safety. And that's very important.'

The fears emerged after figures showed the costs of the government's furlough scheme rising again, with the UK on the brink of the worst recession in 300 years. 

Sir Michael told ITV's Good Morning Britain that the impact on schools was an 'absolute tragedy'. 

'What's happened over the last few weeks and months has been an absolute tragedy,' he said.

'It's been a tragedy for those youngsters who need school, need the structure of school, need the routine of school, need teachers who will be working with them, to support them when they get very little support at home.'

He added: 'I just don't know how we've made such a mess of it, because headteachers, and I know lots of headteachers, will have been saying to the Department for Education, you've got this wrong.

'If you're going to insist on social distancing and a maximum of 15 in a class we will need double the amount of space, we will need double the amount of teachers and we've got to make sure we have that.'

Former education secretary Justine Greening said the government was failing to understand that lockdown cannot truly end until schools reopen.

She told GMB: 'I think many people will be very surprised that there isn't yet a government plan in place to help our schools get back open and there's also not a government plan in place to help children that have been most affected by the schools shutdown to be able to catch up.

'And the big risk for Boris Johnson's government now is that unless they bring forward a proper joined-up strategy, then it won't be a government that delivers levelling up in Britain, it will end up being a government that levels down and nobody wants to see that.'

Sunak 'fears schools hit as big as credit crunch' 

Rishi Sunak has warned school closures are as damaging to the economy as the 2008 credit crunch, it was claimed today.

The Chancellor is believed to be among the most hawkish in government on the need to reopen schools. 

He has privately told colleagues that the impact of keeping millions of pupils at home is the same scale as the financial crisis, which required nearly £140billion in taxpayer bailouts, according to the Telegraph.

The fears emerged after figures showed the costs of the government's furlough scheme rising again, with the UK on the brink of the worst recession in 300 years.  

She added: 'It will open up opportunity gaps that were already there before and make them even wider.'

Meanwhile health bosses have raised concerns that around 10 million people will be on the waiting list for NHS treatment by the end of the year - more than double the current figure - due to a combination of social distancing measures, a backlog of treatments and staffing shortages.

The PM, who will face a grilling from Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer on Wednesday at Prime Minister's Questions, will reopen outdoor attractions where people remain in their cars, such as safari parks and drive-in cinemas, because the risk of spreading the disease is lower outside.

A Downing Street official said: 'People are continuing to make huge sacrifices to reduce the spread of coronavirus and avoid a second spike, but we know it is tough and where we can safely open up more attractions, and it is supported by the science, we will do so.'

Questions remain, however, over returning pupils to school with a number of councils, including in the north west of England, opposing plans to widely reopen after new data suggested coronavirus could still be spreading in their local areas.

Children in nursery, Reception, Year 1 and Year 6 in England began returning to primary school last week after the Government eased lockdown measures.

700,000 children 'are doing no work at home' 

Tory MPs have demanded a route map to get children back to school amid warnings 700,000 of the most vulnerable are not doing any work at home. 

Robert Halfon, chair of the education select committee, said many of disadvantaged pupils do not even have access to computers, predicting an 'epidemic of educational poverty' without more assistance.

Meanwhile, there is pressure for a Nightingale hospitals-style operation to use community halls and churches as temporary classrooms.  

Mr Halfon told the Commons last night: 'Why is that we can turn a blind eye to thousands of demonstrators and campaign for pubs and garden centres to reopen yet it is so hard to reopen our schools?' 

But some schools said they did not have enough space on site to admit all pupils in the eligible year groups, while adhering to Government guidance to limit class sizes to 15 and encourage fewer interactions.

Mr Williamson said the Government would like to see schools who 'have the capacity' bring back more pupils where possible before the summer break but conceded the Government was 'working to bring all children back to school in September'. 

Former education secretary Lord Blunkett said there was a lack of ambition being shown by the Government in ensuring pupils get back to school.

The Labour peer told BBC Radio 4's World At One: 'To be honest, I think it is a lack of will, it is a lack of 'can do'.

'It is a failure to do what we have already done with the health service and economy, which is to say there are challenges, there are real problems but we are going as a nation to seek to overcome them.

Gary Murray, who has two daughters aged 15 and eight, said: 'The question I feel a lot of parents want answering is; what is going to be different if they go back in September to what is different to them going back to school now?'. Pictured: Children at a French bilingual school in Fulham, London, use hoops for social distancing

Gary Murray, who has two daughters aged 15 and eight, said: 'The question I feel a lot of parents want answering is; what is going to be different if they go back in September to what is different to them going back to school now?'. Pictured: Children at a French bilingual school in Fulham, London, use hoops for social distancing

Senior Tory MP urges Boris Johnson to set up 'national education army'

Senior Tory MP Robert Halfon has urged Boris Johnson to set up a 'national education army' to help pupils catch up with their learning in the coming months. 

Mr Halfon, the chairman of the Education Select Committee, said retired teachers, graduates and Ofsted inspectors should be asked to help open libraries and school gyms to create temporary classrooms. 

He said such an effort would help mitigate the damage already done by the coronavirus crisis to the education prospects of 'left behind' pupils. 

He told The Telegraph: 'We could start it now. Boris went on about this wonderful health service volunteering thing - which is great - but why on earth aren't we doing it for education?

'Why isn't Boris getting up there and saying 'I am going to have a national education army in our country to look after the 700,000 vulnerable children who are not doing any home or school work at the moment'? That is what Boris has got to do - it has got to come from the top.

'Why is it that other countries, not just in Europe but across the world, can have the ambition to get their children, in all kinds of creative ways, back into school and we can't?

'I can only conclude that the Government is losing the plot.'

The trained teacher added: 'I just know that we've got to do this. If we can set up the Nightingale hospitals in the time we did, why on Earth can't we invest in the future of our children?'

Steve Chalke, founder of the Oasis academy chain, told the BBC there should be a Nightingale-style drive to use community halls and churches for teaching children. 

'I think there are other ways around dealing with this as well because what the Government has said about bringing children back – keeping them two metres apart, socially distanced but bringing them back – well, of course it is not possible to bring all children back into a school building and keep the social distancing – it is an oxymoron, you can't do both things,' he said.

'But in any community there are other buildings that can be used – community halls, churches and other faith groups' buildings, hotels.

'We've explored conversations with some people like that so you can bring children back in and use those buildings because their emotional and social development is so important.'

Shops will only be able to reopen if they have completed a Covid-19 risk assessment and can implement social distancing measures.

But other businesses, including pubs, restaurants and hairdressers, will remain shut until July 4 at the earliest, Mr Sharma said.

It comes as hospitality chiefs have warned the rule requiring people to stay two metres apart could jeopardise firms' ability to reopen, with some asking for the distance to be halved.

Mr Sharma said the rule was being kept under review and 'when it is safe to do so, we will see whether you can move to a shorter distance'.

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2020-06-10 11:46:56Z
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PMQs: Boris Johnson to take questions in parliament – watch live - Guardian News

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  1. PMQs: Boris Johnson to take questions in parliament – watch live  Guardian News
  2. Coronavirus: Prime Minister's Questions  BBC News
  3. Boris Johnson boasts he's helped hungry children while ending their free meal vouchers  Mirror Online
  4. UK politics live news: Keir Starmer presses Boris Johnson over criminal justice and Windrush at PMQs  The Guardian
  5. PMQs LIVE: Boris lashes out at China as he vows to hit back at Beijing 'loud and clear'  Express.co.uk
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-06-10 10:50:17Z
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