Schools reopening: Boris Johnson to hold 4pm press conference today as millions of kids return to class across England

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BORIS Johnson will hold a Downing St press conference this afternoon to hail the return of millions of children across England to school today.

The PM will appear in No 10 to hail the restarting of physical lessons and to reassure parents that classrooms are safe.

 

Boris Johnson will hold a press conference this afternoon
The PM visited a vaccination centre in London this morning

He is also likely to be grilled about his thoughts on Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s bombshell interview with Oprah.

Yesterday the PM insisted the country is “ready” for the return of schools with cases, hospitalisations, and deaths having all plunged in recent weeks.

He said the tide has turned so much against the virus that now “the risk is actually in not going back to school given all the suffering, all the loss of learning we have seen”.

And he insisted that he’s “very hopeful” things will go “according to plan” with a mass testing blitz and extra safety measures in place.

Today’s return of schools marks the first step in the PM’s plan to get the country fully out of lockdown on June 21.

As part of phase one rules around meeting another household have been loosened to allow people to leave home to meet one other person outdoors for a coffee or picnic.

And visits to care homes are also resuming today under strictly controlled conditions.

Boris said although it is “only a small relaxation of the rules”, the changes will bring “joy and relief” to families after months of “tough restrictions”.

Pupils up and down the country headed back to lessons for the first time since December, with a huge mass testing operation under way and extra Covid precautions in place.

Secondary school pupils are being asked to take three tests at school over the next two weeks, and after that will be provided with two tests a week to carry out at home.

They will also be strongly encouraged to wear masks in the classroom until at least the Easter holidays.

Millions of children have returned to school across England today

The PM will reassure parents that classrooms are safe to return to

Primary school kids won’t have to don face coverings, but extra guidance has been introduced saying visitors and staff should use them in areas where social distancing between adults isn’t possible such as corridors.

Children’s minister Vicky Ford said she expects most students to voluntarily use masks but insisted they shouldn’t be forced to.

She said: “It’s a hugely exciting day and a huge relief to so many children, families, schools, staff all across the country.

“There will be some who will be nervous about going back, but we’ve put in these extra measures so we can make sure we keep Covid out of the classroom.

“That is a whole extra layer of keeping Covid out of the classroom, but we need to also set this aside against a very different backdrop to in January.

“We’ve had the fantastic vaccination programme. That does give us that extra level of protection against the virus as we bring children back into school.”

Asked what teachers can do if students refuse to wear a mask, Ms Ford stressed ministers haven’t made them mandatory.

She said: “Nobody should be denied an education because they don’t wear a mask but we do really strongly recommend it.

“There will be some students who will be exempt from wearing masks and we haven’t made it mandatory though we’re strongly encouraging it.

“The vast majority of teenagers want to do everything they can to protect themselves from the virus, to protect their friends, their family, staff, and they understand the masks.”

Ms Ford also insisted schools won’t be closed again even if the R-rate does rise, saying that was the recommendation of scientists now that more than a third of adults have been vaccinated.

And she didn’t rule out the possibility that children could get the jab in the future, saying Government scientists “will be looking at plans for the future’ once all over-18s are jabbed.

Secondary pupils are being asked to wear masks in the classroom

There is a mass testing blitz under way at schools

The children’s minister said pupils who test positive will have to go home and stay out of school for 10 days, and it will be up to teachers to keep tabs on their close contacts and tell them to self-isolate too.

And she insisted kids who test positive with a lateral flow test but then negative with amore reliable PCR kit still won’t be able to return to school earlier than that.

Roughly one in every thousand lateral flow tests returns a false positive.

Union chiefs have warned secondary schools could be forced to close again if not enough children abide by the recommendation to wear masks.

And a leading children’s doctor warned schools can only open safely if everything else “stays locked down” for at least three weeks.

Professor Russell Viner, president of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, said reopening schools will likely add around 0.2 to the R number.

He said: “It’s very plausible, in fact I think very likely, that we will keep the R below one with schools open with these mitigations in place.

“And I think the key thing is that children themselves, and parents, don’t think ‘the schools are open, we can relax, we can mix outside of school’ – in a sense, come out of lockdown around the school opening.

“The modelling – and I think the Government has been clear on this – is about we can reopen schools safely if everything else stays locked down over the next three weeks.”

Not all secondary pupils are going back today, as some schools are staggering the return to help with the implementation of mass testing.

A top scientist also moved this morning to reassure parents that schools are “absolutely” safe for children to return to.

Professor Calum Semple, who sits on the Government’s Sage advisory group, said pupils are at lower risk of catching the virus.

He acknowledged it was “inevitable that we will see a rise in cases” as a result of adults mixing because “schools are a place of work”.

And he said advice for teachers “is going to be wearing face masks, being really careful in the common room – their colleagues are more of a risk to them than the children.”

Prof Semple said: “It’s going to be difficult and it is going to mean some social distancing and face mask-wearing, good ventilation until really late summer when we’ve got the vast majority people vaccinated.”