Revealed: 15 Norfolk schools needing 'immediate' work on ceilings to ensure safety

Norfolk County Council's inspected sixty schools since the beginning of the academic year

Norfolk County Council
Author: Sian RochePublished 2nd Oct 2024

Local leaders say fifteen schools in Norfolk will need immediate work on their ceilings to ensure their safety.

Norfolk County Council's inspected sixty schools since the beginning of the academic year - after concerns were raised about a material in their ceilings which was prone to collapse if damaged.

It followed the partial collapse of a lath and plaster ceiling at an academy led by Synergy Education Trust.

Whilst the material alone is not a cause for concern, ceilings may be at risk of collapse if the lath and plaster is damaged.

Lath and plaster ceilings are often above suspended ceilings in schools, so damage cannot be seen on a visual inspection alone.

The council had initially arranged inspections at 23 maintained schools, where it knew the material was present.

These inspections were then extended to a further 37 schools, where lath and plaster could be present because of the age of the building.

The checks prompted the closure of Avenue Junior School for three days and one class at Parkside School, in Norwich, also closed for a day.

Now it's been confirmed fifteen schools, of the 60 inspected, require immediate work on parts of their ceilings.

These schools are:

Avenue Junior School

The Parkside School

Freethorpe Community Primary and Nursery School

Bacton Primary School

Brooke VC CE Primary School

Hainford VC Primary School

Woodton Primary School

Horning Community Primary School

Ludham Primary School and Nursery

Terrington St. John Primary School

Tilney St. Lawrence Community Primary School

Ellingham CE VC Primary School

Walpole Highway Primary School

St George’s Primary & Nursery School

Hevingham Primary School

All these schools will remain open, with appropriate measures in place to ensure a safe and effective learning environment for pupils.

“The safety of children and staff always has to come first"

Councillor Penny Carpenter, Cabinet Member for Children Services, said: “The safety of children and staff always has to come first, so it was important that we carried out these checks as soon as this issue came to light.

“I want to thank our school leaders and staff for their support with this and the huge efforts some have made to keep open or reopen their schools. We’re sorry for the inconvenience but we had to reassure ourselves of the safety of our children.

“We will now be working to make repairs at the 15 schools where they are needed and will get these done as quickly as we can, whilst minimising any disruption to children’s learning.

“We’ve already notified the Department for Education of this issue, but we will now be writing to them with details of our findings and highlighting the additional financial pressure this will place on our school capital budget.”

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