A man wearing a face covering walks past graffiti on the Lower Newtownards Rd in Belfast on New Year's Day with a message reading "Wear a mask, it hasn't gone away you know". Photo / AP
With daily coronavirus infections surging as a result of a new virus variant, the British government faced mounting pressure on Saturday from teachers' unions to keep schools in England closed for at least another two weeks.
The government, which oversees schools in England, has already decided to keep all schools in London closed next week to try to stem new infections. Unions want the policy extended across the whole of England, expressing fears about the health of teachers and children.
The UK on Saturday hit a daily record for new coronavirus infections — 57,725 — and according to figures compiled by Johns Hopkins University has overtaken Italy once again to be the worst hit country in Europe with nearly 75,000 Covid-related deaths.
The fear is the number of deaths will grow over the coming weeks. The UK has recorded its five highest daily new infection numbers over the past five days — all above 50,000 and double the daily number of only a few weeks ago.
After an emergency meeting on Saturday, the National Education Union, which represents over 450,000 education workers, called on Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Conservative government to move learning online for at least two weeks. It also told members they have a legal right not to have to work in an "unsafe environment" of accelerating coronavirus cases, hospital admissions and deaths.
"We are doing our job as a union by informing our members that they have a legal right to refuse to work in unsafe conditions which are a danger to their health and to the health of their school communities," said Kevin Courtney, the union's joint general secretary.
Another union representing teachers, the NASUWT, also called for an immediate nationwide move to remote education because of virus safety concerns. Its general secretary, Patrick Roach, said there was "genuine concern" that schools and colleges could not reopen safely at this time.
"The NASUWT will not hesitate to take appropriate action in order to protect members whose safety is put at risk as a result of the failure of employers or the government to ensure safe working conditions in schools and colleges," he said.
The government's own Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies warned at a December 22 meeting that schools needed to stay closed to bring down virus transmission rates.
The UK is struggling with a sharp spike in new cases as a result of a new virus variant that officials said could be up to 70 per cent more infectious.
The variant has been particularly prevalent in London and in surrounding areas, prompting Education Secretary Gavin Williamson to row back on plans to allow some primary schools — those for children 11 and under — in the capital to reopen as scheduled on January 4.
Most other primary schools in England are still scheduled to open on Monday. High school reopenings have already been delayed for millions of students. Exam-year pupils are scheduled to return on January 11 and others a week later.
With many British hospitals at or near capacity, there are growing concerns over how the already stretched National Health Service will cope with people seeking treatment for Covid-19 after getting infected over the holidays. Field hospitals that were built last spring but were then mothballed are getting outfitted again to take in patients.
On the inoculations front, Britain began vaccinating people over 80 and healthcare workers on December 8 with the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine. Last week, the government approved another vaccine made by Oxford University and pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca that is cheaper and easier to use.
The UK plans to ramp up vaccinations on Monday using the vaccine developed by the University of Oxford and pharmaceutical firm AstraZeneca, and has set a goal of vaccinating 2 million people a week as soon as possible.
The Princess Royal Hospital in Haywards Heath in southern England was one of the first to get the newly approved vaccine on Saturday.
"So whilst it's really difficult, and staff are under pressure, the hospitals are coping and we are still providing care to everybody who needs it," said Dr George Findlay, the trust's chief medical officer.
More than a million people in the UK have already received their first jab of the Pfizer vaccine.
Britain plans to give second doses of both vaccines within 12 weeks rather than the 21 days initially planned, to accelerate immunisations across as many people as quickly as possible.