Labour peer advising teaching unions how to avoid a return to the classroom without breaking the law
A LABOUR peer is advising teaching unions how to avoid a return to the classroom without breaking the law.
Lawyer John Hendy QC’s 14-page dossier, leaked to The Sun, risks plunging plans to re-open schools next month into chaos.
The left-winger, given a Lords seat by Jeremy Corbyn, sent his memo to unions including the National Education Union.
And he briefed them on how to avoid the sack for refusing to return to work by using employee protection laws designed for factories and mines.
The ex-personal injury lawyer argues coronavirus could be considered a hazardous substance and therefore is covered by a wealth of Health and Safety rules.
It would mean teachers have the right to stop working if they say they feel unsafe because of Covid-19 risks in the classroom.
If the unions exploit this loophole, it jeopardises Boris Johnson’s promises to get schools up and running from September.
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer was last night under pressure to distance himself from Hendy’s wrecking bid.
A Government source said: “Sir Keir Starmer needs to stop dancing to the unions’ tune and start helping to get children back into the classroom safely.”
The Sun understands the NEU, the UK’s largest teaching union, attended Hendy’s briefing on his plan. So did the PCS public sector union and the RMT union.
The meeting was organised by the Trade Union Coordinating Group in June and his advice has been widely circulated in union circles. Hendy had not last night responded to repeated requests for comment.
The leak reveals his plan involves using the 2002 Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations as a loophole.
At the virtual meeting, Hendy said the laws “require that the employer shall ensure that the exposure of his employees to substances hazardous to health is prevented”.
He said: “Substances hazardous to health clearly include the virus Covid-19.”
He added employees, including teachers in his view, have the right to stop work in “circumstances of danger, which the employee reasonably believed to be serious and imminent and which he could not reasonably have been expected to avert”.
He added: “Nobody could doubt that coronavirus is serious. The imminence of the threat depends on the circumstances of the workplace: The lone tractor driver ploughing a field is not likely to be in such circumstances, school teachers in a small classroom with 30 kids in them might be in a very different situation. So, workers do have rights to refuse work.”
THE SUN SAYS... END CLASS WAR
LABOUR leader Sir Keir Starmer and his coterie feel most comfortable when sitting on the proverbial fence.
Just take their position on Brexit, which has always been as clear as mud.
In the coming days though, the electorate will finally get to see what they’re made of.
If they stick to Labour’s promise to get kids back in school, they’ll earn the respect of Brits everywhere.
If they stay silent while a Labour peer plots to conspire with teaching unions to deprive children of an education, they’ll be shown up as pathetic cowards.
Of course we want children and teachers to stay healthy.
But given the peak of infection was back in early spring, the robust safety measures schools have put in place for the autumn term look more than adequate to us.
Teachers have a moral and civil duty to educate our children, especially when the harm that the enforced absence is having on young minds is becoming painfully clear. And most are itching to get back to work.
Sir Keir must stop watching from the sidelines, be vocal, and help the Government get our kids back to school.
He can start by seeing off this shameless wrecking bid.
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The NEU yesterday said: “The NEU is not being advised by Lord Hendy on Covid-19. We want schools to open as a priority and to remain open as a priority.”
Tory Party chairman Amanda Milling said: “At a time when everyone should be working together to get children back to school, it beggars belief a key Labour figure is actively working to hinder the education of children. It’s time for Sir Keir to come off the fence and unequivocally back efforts to get children back into schools.”
A Labour source said: “It’s a matter of record Keir wants schools open in September and making it happen is a priority. He called it a priority before Boris Johnson."
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