The Department for Education said on Thursday that 104 educational sites were found to contain outdated building materials
Schools across England may be forced to to close down next week after buildings were discovered to contain potentially dangerous concrete.
It comes after 56 sites already received repair works alongside a "loss of confidence in buildings containing the material". The government received criticism for refusing to release a list of schools affected by the RAAC closures, with parents and headteachers being told it will "let you know directly if there is any change to the start of term", the Mirror reports.This means parents should wait to hear from their children's school before taking any action.
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Pupils at over 100 schools in England may be told to stay at home over building safety fearsThe Department for Education will issue urgent warnings to schools with dangerous concrete later today
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School buildings made with crumble-risk concrete told to closeNew advice has reportedly been released by the Department for Education just before term-time starts
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Schools to be told to close classrooms threatened by aerated concreteThe Department for Education is preparing to announce the number of schools in England affected.
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Schools told to close classrooms threatened by aerated concreteThe Department for Education said more than 100 schools in England are affected.
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Merseyside schools to open as normal amid national concrete issueThe Department for Education issued a warning earlier this week
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