No decision on extending school Christmas holidays yet says Health Secretary

Reports have surfaced of a plan to extend school Christmas holidays from December 18 to January 11.

Jeane Freeman @Scot Gov
Published 27th Nov 2020
Last updated 27th Nov 2020

No decision has yet been reached on extending school holidays at Christmas, Health Secretary Jeane Freeman has said.

Reports have surfaced of a leaked document detailing proposals from the Scottish Government to extend the break further into January.

The memo said a plan to extend Christmas holidays from December 18 to January 11 was discussed at the Scottish Government's Education Recovery Group meeting on Thursday.

Responding to this at the Scottish Government's briefing on Friday, Ms Freeman said the Scottish Government "wants to give people as much notice as possible if there is to be any change at all but at this point that decision hasn't been reached''.

She said a view based on the advice of the recovery group will be reached as soon as we can''.

"It would be wrong to overly speculate or jump to conclusions simply because we are looking at different issues,'' she said.

"But at the moment, the Deputy First Minister and his colleagues will be working through what they think is the best way for schools to enter the Christmas break and come out of the Christmas break, and that applies to colleges and universities as well.''

Providing an update on the latest Covid-19 statistics for Scotland, Ms Freeman said 37 deaths and 969 positive tests have been recorded in the past 24 hours.

It brings the death toll under this measure - of people who first tested positive for the virus within the previous 28 days - to 3,676.

Ms Freeman also issued a warning about fraudsters targeting a text message service for people in the shielding category.

She said the Scottish Government is aware of two incidents when a message was sent by someone pretending to be from the texting service asking for people's personal information and said this is being investigated as a matter of urgency.

"The Scottish Government will never send a text message asking for sensitive personal information or banking details,'' she said.

"If you have signed up to the shielding text message service and receive a text asking for financial information or passwords it is almost certainly a scam.

"Anyone who receives a suspicious text or call of this kind can report it to Advice Direct Scotland and if you are unfortunate enough to have been a victim of a scam you should contact the police by calling 101.''

The Health Secretary reminded people that quarantine rules have been reinstated for travellers into Scotland from Estonia and Latvia, who must self-isolate for 14 days upon arrival as of 4am on Saturday.

The travel ban on visitors to the UK from Denmark will be lifted from 4am on Saturday but people will still be required to isolate for 14 days.

The ban on visitors from Denmark was introduced after the discovery of a new variant of Covid-19 in minks.

Ms Freeman said: "The view of the UK chief medical officers is that the risk associated with Denmark is now receding.''

She added: "While the virus is resurgent around the world there is significant variation between countries and areas and as we've seen the situation anywhere can change very rapidly

"That's one of the huge challenges we face in dealing with this pandemic and it is of course why we continue to advise very strongly against non-essential overseas travel at the moment.''

Ms Freeman also paid tribute to the hard work of health and social care staff, who she said have done an "outstanding job in the most challenging and stressful of circumstances''.

She said the Scottish Government is determined to do all it can to support the mental wellbeing of that workforce and urged people to ask for help if they are struggling.

The Scottish Government said more than 53,000 health and social care staff have received psychological support from the National Wellbeing Hub since it was launched in May.

The online hub at promis.scot supports all health and social care workers, including unpaid carers, who need help due to Covid-19, alongside a new 24/7 National Wellbeing helpline.

Hear all the latest news from across the North of Scotland on MFR. Listen on FM, via our Rayo app, DAB, or smart speaker.