ALL nurseries, including those in Tier 4 areas, are to stay open – as officials announce schools in Covid hotspots will remain shut for at least two more weeks.
No10 officials have today confirmed the good news, which will come as a relief to millions of mums and dads living in tough restrictions.
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Nurseries will stay open in Tier 4 areas – although primary and secondary schools will stay shut[/caption] Education Secretary Gavin Williamson is preparing to make a statement today[/caption]A spokesperson for the PM said there are “no plans” to slash provision for tots.
But it’s bad news for parents with older children – as all primary and secondary schools in worst-hit areas will stay closed on January 4.
It comes as a mutant strain of Covid wreaks havoc in London and the south east.
People with the variant are 54 per cent more likely to pass it on to others, according to Public Health England.
Despite being more contagious, the mutation does not appear to cause worse symptoms or more deaths, and it is no more infectious among children than other strains.
January 4: All primary schools will return as planned – except for Covid hotspot areas which will remain closed
January 11: Secondary school kids set to sit key exams this year will return in all areas
January 18: All secondary school kids – except for those living in Covid hotspot areas, where rules will be reviewed regularly
However, Education Secretary Gavin Williamson confirmed this afternoon that schools in the hardest-hit Covid areas will remain closed because of spiralling cases.
In a statement before MPs, he said: “We must always act swiftly when circumstances change.
“The evidence about the new Covid variant and rising infection rates have required some immediate adjustment to our plans for the new term.”
But he vowed to get all kids back in class as soon as possible, telling politicians: “I’m quite clear that we must continue to do all we can to keep children in school.”
It comes despite Michael Gove saying just days ago that he was “confident” schools would reopen across England.
The full list of areas where schools will remain shut until at least January 18 has not yet been revealed.
However, they will include hotspots with the worst infection rates.
Elsewhere across England – in Tiers 1, 2 and 3 and some lesser-hit Tier 4 areas – primary schools will return on January 4 as planned.
And secondary school Years 11 and 13 – those facing critical exams – will return on January 11, before the rest go back on January 18.
Joining areas already in Tier 4 from tomorrow are:
The following areas will be in Tier 3 from tomorrow:
Millions more are heading into Tier 4 measures today after a record 53,135 cases were diagnosed as hospital admissions go well past the April peak.
The Government has this afternoon confirmed a slew of new areas moving tiers – with most Brits now in 3 or 4.
Regions with the highest rates currently outside of Tier 4 include Burnley, with 465.6 cases per 100,000 people, up from 446.5 the previous week.
Tier 2 Eden in Cumbria, which has a rate of 485.2, and Pendle in Lancashire, with a rate of 390.8, are in second and third place.
As of yesterday, Essex is the worst-hit area of England.
Brentwood has the highest rates in the country, with 1,258.1 cases per 100,000 people.
Nearby Epping Forest and Thurrock are in second and third place on the grim hitlist, with 1,256 and 1,181.6 cases respectively.
More than six million people in east and south-east England went into the highest level of restrictions at midnight on Boxing Day.
Some 24 million people – 43 per cent of the population – are now in Tier 4, but that number is expected to soon swell.
A list of the areas in Tier 4 at present are:
A full list of the areas that joined Tier 4 on Boxing Day are: