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Daily News Summary
21 November 2023

GSA CEO: Labour's tax plans could 'damage equality progress'
Jewish charity receiving reports of 'abhorrent' abuse in UK schools
Welsh government considering plans to reduce school summer holidays in Wales by one week
Government's childcare expansion favours wealthier families in England, research finds
Senior doctors warn of looming measles outbreak amid falling vaccine rates

GSA CEO: Labour's tax plans could 'damage equality progress'

 

Plans by the Labour Party to impose VAT on school fees could hit girls “hardest”, chief executive of the Girls’ Schools Association (GSA) Donna Stevens told delegates at the organisation's annual conference yesterday. She added: “My concern is that this policy would hit a disproportionate number of girls’ schools and that’s going to be damaging for the progress we’ve made in the last 150 years in terms of equality.” Marina Gardiner Legge, head of Oxford High School GDST and president of the GSA, is also quoted on the effect of the tax plans on single-sex schools. Commenting on the negative impact the policy would have on both the independent and state sectors, chief executive of the Independent Schools Council (ISC) Julie Robinson warned: “If those [smaller] schools close, or if a proportion of their pupils move to the state system, that becomes a cost to the state sector.” By Eleanor Busby, The Independent. 

 
The Independent

Jewish charity receiving reports of 'abhorrent' abuse in UK schools

 

The Community Security Trust says it has received reports of “abhorrent” incidents of abuse in British schools since the start of the Israel-Hamas war, with some taking place in primary school playgrounds. The charity, which protects Jewish people from abuse, revealed that in Greater Manchester - which has the largest Jewish population in England outside London - reports of antisemitism have risen by 880 per cent. By Ewan Somerville, The Telegraph. 

 
The Telegraph

Welsh government considering plans to reduce school summer holidays in Wales by one week

 

School summer holidays in Wales could be reduced by a week under new government plans that would also see the week-long October half term break extended to a fortnight. A decision will be made in the spring and, if agreed, the proposed changes would take effect in the 2025-26 school year. By Bethan Lewis and Antonia Matthews, BBC News. 

 
BBC

Government's childcare expansion favours wealthier families in England, research finds

 

Wealthier families are almost six times as likely to benefit from the government’s childcare expansion as low-income families, according to research by the New Economics Foundation think tank. Experts have warned that children from disadvantaged backgrounds will be “denied access” to early years education because their parents do not meet the specified eligibility criteria, which states that both parents must work at least 16 hours a week. By Carmen Aguilar García and Alexandra Topping, The Guardian.

 
The Guardian

Senior doctors warn of looming measles outbreak amid falling vaccine rates

 

The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH) has updated its national guidance on measles for the first time in decades ahead of a potential outbreak this winter. Recent data from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) shows there has been a sharp rise in cases of the illness across the country. By Paul Gallagher, iNews. 

 
iNews

 

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