UK minister seeks gratitude for ‘good job’ over crumbling schools

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Revelations of crumbling school buildings has sparked anger among parents and teachers, and represent a new political headache for PM Rishi Sunak.

Revelations of crumbling school buildings has sparked anger among parents and teachers, and represent a new political headache for PM Rishi Sunak.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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LONDON - Britain's Education Secretary Gillian Keegan made an expletive-ridden outburst on Monday, complaining she wasn't being thanked enough for doing a "f***ing good job" in dealing with potentially hundreds of unsafe school buildings.

The revelations of old and weak concrete in schools, which saw 104 ordered to shut buildings only days before the start of a new term and others using rooms propped up by steel girders, has sparked anger among parents and teachers.

The issue, a new political headache for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ahead of an election expected next year, has also added to the impression of decaying public infrastructure in Britain.

Ms Keegan said the government was still awaiting responses from about 1,500 schools that were sent surveys to identify those with Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (RAAC), a lightweight form of concrete commonly used during the 1960s - 1980s but now considered weak and unsafe.

She told BBC Radio that schools suspected to have RAAC would be inspected in the next two weeks, adding that while most may not have RAAC, "hundreds" could.

Ms Keegan risked inflaming the debate further in unguarded remarks caught on camera following a separate interview with ITV, when she suggested she had done more than others to try to resolve the issue.

"Does anyone ever say 'you know what, you've done a f***ing good job, because everyone else has sat on their arse and done nothing?'," Ms Keegan, Britain's fifth education secretary in two years, said. "No signs of that, no?".

Mr Sunak, meanwhile, told reporters that 95 per cent of the roughly 22,000 schools in England would not be affected, and issues could be limited to single classrooms in many cases.

But heaping pressure on the prime minister, the former top civil servant in the education department said that Mr Sunak, in a previous job as finance minister, had halved annual funding to repair schools when officials had asked for it to be doubled.

"I was absolutely amazed to see... the decision," former Permanent Secretary Jonathan Slater told BBC Radio.

Asked if he was to blame, Mr Sunak said it was "completely and utterly wrong" and that the funding he approved was in line with decisions taken over the previous decade. REUTERS

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