Monday, 11 May 2020

NEU survey finds 92% of members would not feel safe under PM's proposals for schools reopening

From the NEU

Within one hour 49,000 members of the National Education Union (NEU) responded to a survey about the Government's announcement tonight. They have given  a resounding NO to the Prime Ministers's roadmap for wider school reopening.
85 per cent of respondents said they disagreed with Boris Johnson's plans to restart lessons for reception, year 1 and year 6 from 1 June.
92 per cent said they would not feel safe with the proposed wider opening of schools.
Of those with school age children, 89 per cent said they felt it would be unsafe or very unsafe to send their children back to school. 
Of those respondents working from home because they have a pre-existing medical condition or are pregnant, 96 per cent said they felt unsafe or very unsafe returning to work. And 96 per cent of those with a family member living with them who has a pre-existing medical condition or are pregnant thought it would be unsafe or very unsafe for them to return. 
92% said the Government must meet the NEU's five tests before schools can re-open.
Dr Mary Bousted, NEU joint general secretary, of the National Education Union said: 
The Government must work with the unions to establish a position which gains the confidence of staff in schools. Tonight's announcement – so out of step with Scotland and Wales and with its confusion about social distancing – has resulted in 92 per cent of NEU members saying they currently feel a wider opening of schools would be unsafe 
The Prime Minister describes this as a ''first sketch'' of a roadmap but our members think this sketch must urgently be re-drawn. 
The incoherence in this plan has generated genuine fear. For school leaders, the lack of clarity about what is expected before, or on 1 June, is simply unacceptable.
Kevin Courtney NEU on Sky News LINK
 

Sunday, 10 May 2020

Greens: Outcry from workers proves Government proposals not consulted upon or thought through

Responding to Boris Johnson’s public address this evening Sian Berry, co-leader of the Green Paarty  said:
We were told we were going to get a roadmap for the way forward today but the Prime Minster’s address was ambiguous and confusing. The shift to ‘Stay Alert’ from ‘Stay Home’ as a key message, offers absolutely no clarity and leaves people wondering what exactly it is they’re being asked to do.

We said on Thursday and we maintain this evening, that while we understand and share the anxiety to get the economy moving and for people to see their loved ones, easing lock down too soon,which we strongly believe it still is, could lead to unnecessary deaths, a second peak and the overwhelming of the NHS.

The 'world beating test, track and trace scheme’ which Boris Johnson referred to, must be a community shield which we’ve been advocating for, for weeks.

The immediate outcry from key unions in the industries affected demonstrates that the implications for worker safety have not been either consulted or properly thought through.

We are pleased to see the Government finally acknowledging the severity of the situation in care homes and now have expectations of immediate action to provide a clear plan for quarantining and routine testing of staff and residents.

Staying at home will continue to save lives and protect the NHS so that’s the advice, until there’s more clarity on what the Government is actually trying to say, that we should be following.

CBI's cautious reaction to PM's speech on lockdown plans

The CBI has responded to the Prime Minister’s address on the continuing Covid-19 crisis and the status of lockdown measures.
Dame Carolyn Fairbairn, CBI Director General, said:
“Today marks the first glimmer of light for our faltering economy. A phased and careful return to work is the only way to protect jobs and pay for future public services. The Prime Minister has set out the first steps for how this can happen. 
“Businesses are keen to open and get our economy back on its feet. But they also know putting health first is the only sustainable route to economic recovery. The message of continued vigilance is right.  
“This announcement marks the start of a long process. While stopping work was necessarily fast and immediate, restarting will be slower and more complex. It must go hand-in-hand with plans for schools, transport, testing and access to PPE. Firms will want to see a roadmap, with dates they can plan for. 
“Success will rest on flexibility within a framework: clear guidance which firms can adapt for their particular circumstances. Financial support will also need to evolve for sectors moving at different speeds – some remaining in hibernation, while others get ready to open safely. 
“The coming weeks should see business, government and employee representatives working together as part of a national effort built on openness and trust. This is the only way to revive the UK economy and protect both lives and livelihoods.”

NEU, NASUWT and Rebecca Long-Bailey tell PM 'no re-opening' until tests met



Battle lines are being drawn tonight following Johnson's confusing announcement which totally ignored the views of education unions over the re-opening of schools. The NEU has warned members to expect an email survey tonight. Here in Brent we need to hear from the Lead Member for schools, Cllr Amir Agha, whether he supports an early return to school even if the 5 sensible tests are not met.

This is what the NEU said a short while ago:

Commenting on the Prime Minister’s announcement on changes to lockdown, Dr Mary Bousted, Joint General Secretary of the National Education Union, said:
“We think that the announcement by the Government that schoolsmay reopen from June 1 with reception and years 1 and 6 is nothing short of reckless.

“Coronavirus continues to ravage communities in the UK and the rate of Covid-19 infection is still far too great for the wider opening of our schools.

“A study published last week by the University of East Anglia suggested that school closures are the single most effective way of suppressing the spread of the virus.

“If schools are to re-open, we need the Government to meet the five tests we have set to keep children, their families and our staff safe.

“There must be much lower numbers of Covid-19 cases, with extensive arrangements for testing and contact tracing to keep it that way. This test has manifestly not been met.

“We must have a national plan for social distancing, hygiene, appropriate PPE and regular testing to ensure our schools and colleges don’t become hot spots for Covid-19. This test has manifestly not been met.

“And there must be plans drawn up to protect vulnerable staff, or those who live with vulnerable people, to stop more educators or members of their families dying of this dreadful disease.

“We are supported in this by nearly 400,000 staff and parents who have signed our petition to reopen schools only when it is safe. And Parentkind, one of the largest parents’ groups in the UK, back our tests

“We have written three letters to the Government for the science around school reopening, to share the modelling it is using and discuss the concerns raised by our five tests. We have received no reply.

“If schools are re-opened to blatant breaches of health and safety, we will strongly support our members who take steps to protect their pupils, their colleagues and their families. The worst outcome of any wider re-opening of schools is a second spike of Covid-19 infection.

“Our members care deeply about the children they teach – and no-one is more aware of the struggles faced by vulnerable pupils, or those from vulnerable families, than their teachers. If schools cannot safely re-open, we need other ways of supporting those children. For instance, the better weather gives us a chance for some education to take place outdoors, where children are least likely to pick up infection.

The NEU will survey its members immediately after the Prime Minister has spoken to gauge their reaction to this announcement.
“We urge the Government to follow the example of the Welsh and Scottish governments who have made the decision not to re-open schools at this time.

“Now is the time for Government to listen and do the right thing.”

The NASUWT issued this statement:

 Responding to tonight’s statement from the Prime Minister, Dr Patrick Roach, General Secretary of the NASUWT – The Teachers’ Union, said:

“The Prime Minister’s statement that it would be “madness” to risk a second spike in transmission of the Coronavirus highlights the need for extreme caution.

“Regrettably, the Prime Minister’s announcement is likely to provoke confusion and does not address the genuine concerns that have been raised by teachers.

“The Prime Minister’s announcement lacks the clarity of statements issued by Ministers in Scotland and Wales who have reaffirmed the key ‘stay at home’ message.

“The Government’s announcement that schools in England might reopen to more children from 1 June risks thousands of schools rushing to make decisions about how best to safeguard the health and safety of children and staff in the absence of any clear national guidance.

“It is baffling that following the Government’s decision to close all schools on public health grounds that the Government now expects individual schools to work out for themselves whether or not it will be safe to reopen on 1 June and potentially put at risk the health of children, staff and the public.

“With no date yet set for when the Government’s guidance will be forthcoming, school leaders in England are being placed in an extremely difficult position of being asked to draw up plans affecting lives of children and their teachers.

“Today’s announcements will do little to assuage teachers’ concerns about the premature reopening of schools.

“The Government must, with the utmost urgency, address teachers’ concerns or expect to lose the goodwill of the profession.

“Unless and until the Government can demonstrate that schools will be safe for staff and children, all schools should continue to limit their opening only to vulnerable children and to children of key workers.

“The NASUWT will continue to press the Government on the need for clear guidance and stringent and enforceable health and safety risk assessment measures to be in place in every school prior to relaxing the current restrictions.

“The UK Government’s message to be responsible and to ‘stay alert’ will ring hollow with teachers who are still being denied access to appropriate PPE and who have been given no clear guidance about how social distancing can be practiced in school settings.

“Notwithstanding the Government’s five tests, the bottom line is that no teacher or child should be expected to go into schools until it can be demonstrated that it is safe for them to do so.”

Brent governors should support the teaching unions' demands before any return to school

National press looking forward to Monday
This article is my personal view but based on my experience as a governor and former headteacher and teacher.

While the national press was trumpeting an end to lockdown last week I received notice of a meeting scheduled for Tuesday afternoon for Chairs of Governors with the Brent Strategic Director of Children and Young People 'to discuss the anticipated government announcement about the phased reopening of schools in the second half of this term.'


Following the unprecedented joint  statement by 10 teacher unions setting out conditions for re-opening I hope that phased re-opening will be delayed or extremely limited. LINK


This is because as governors we have a duty of care to our staff and must ensure that their workplace is safe. The lack of clarity from government ministers and press speculation over re-opening has taken its toll on headteachers faced with seemingly impossible demands that at the extreme may mean life or death decisions. LINK  They have to weigh up the damage to children of not attending school, including those without access to on-line learning, help from parents, space to study or access to a garden and the responsibility to ensure that their school does not become a hot spot of infection.


The NEU has sought evidence based justification for government decision making which as yet has not been answered: (Click bottom right square for full page view)





 I believe that governors should support the 5 tests put forward by the NEU that need to be met before any return to school:

Our five tests

We want to begin to reopen schools and colleges as soon as we can. But this needs to be safe for society, for children and their families and the staff who work in them.
We have these five tests which the Government should show will be met by reliable evidence, peer-reviewed science and transparent decision-making.

Test 1 : Much lower numbers of Covid-19 cases

The new case count must be much lower than it is now, with a sustained downward trend and confidence that new cases are known and counted promptly. And the Government must have extensive arrangements for testing and contact tracing to keep it that way.

Test 2 : A national plan for social distancing

The Government must have a national plan including parameters for both appropriate physical distancing and levels of social mixing in schools, as well as for appropriate PPE, which will be locally negotiated at school-by-school and local authority level.

Test 3 : Testing, testing, testing!

Comprehensive access to regular testing for children and staff to ensure our schools and colleges don’t become hot spots for Covid-19.

Test 4 : Whole school strategy

Protocols to be put in place to test a whole school or college when a case occurs and for isolation to be strictly followed.

Test 5 : Protection for the vulnerable

Vulnerable staff, and staff who live with vulnerable people, must work from home, fulfilling their professional duties to the extent that is possible. Plans must be specifically address the protection of vulnerable parents, grandparents and carers.
Plans in Brent need to take account of the local context where cases and deaths are running at one of the highest levels in London (precise figures change daily) and where the ONS (Office of National Statistics) locality statistics reveal hot spots within the borough. LINK

Latest figures are that nationally Brent is the second highest are in the country with 141.5 per 100,000 population. Second only to Newhan at 144.3.  The total number of cases in Brent (with the caveat that because of lack of testing there are probably many more) is 1405 and 52% of all recorded deaths were Covid related.

The ONS also report on the comparative incidence of death from Coronavirus in different ethnic groups. This anaylsis is quite old now and the latest suggestion is that the risk has worsened if anything:




This means that in any phased return to full school opening governing bodies should be aware that their BAME  (Black and Minority Ethnic) staff and BAME parents are at additional risk and need to take account also of the statistics within their local community.

As with the NHS this governors need to ensure that staff have access to Personal Protection Equipment (PPE).  So far, and rightly, the NHS and Care Homes have been priortised by the local authority but PPE will need to be provided to schools if they re-open.  So far schools have only received gloves and the argument has been made that masks would frighten young children. In fact with the increasing use of masks and the likely introduction of a requirement to use them on public transport, children will soon be used to them.

Although there are BAME staff at every level in our schools the numbers are higher amongst support and premises staff.  They are more likely to live within the borough and thus exposed to infection locally.  If they live a distance away from the school they are more likely as low paid workers to use public transport rather than own a car. Travelling on public transport during rush hour is also likely to expose them to infection. Should we be considering changing hours to avoid peak travel periods.

Another consideration is if children return how will schools handle the transition. Many children without access to a garden will be suffering from the side effects of lockdown and separation from their peers. and perhaps from tensions in the home caused by isolation in the family unit. Despite the best efforts of school staff to provide learning packs and on-line  education, some will lag behind more fortunate peers.  The children's mental health will be paramount and schools may well decide that a return to  formal curriculum will have to be gradual with plenty of time for outdoor learning and creative activities in the first weeks of return.

Practical considerations will be paramount.  How to organise classrooms and pupil numbers so that social distancing can be maintained in the playground as well as the classroom.  Many classrooms are small so may comfortably accommodate only 8-10 children at social distancing of 2 metres. If a Year 6 class is split into 3 or 4 classes each will require a space and staff - how practical is that?  If priority is given to children  without access to on-line resources teaches will be dealing with both the physical and virtual classroom and the interactions involved. Workload is a consideration.

There has been discussion about a phased return perhaps prioritising Years 5 and 6 and othjers returning later as well as suggestions of one week on, one week off shifts or 8.30 to 11.30, 12.30-3.30 sessions.

It will be important for schools to share what has worked for them during the partial closure when they were dealing with key worker and vulnerable children.

Governing boards will have much to discuss and plans and risk assessments to complete before any return to school. 



Saturday, 9 May 2020

No return until it’s safe! Joint Education Unions urge caution whilst mourning their own member

Contributed



Pamela Mistry


In response to the government’s “five pillars” that needed to be met before relaxing lockdown, the NEU has published its own “FIVE TESTS” which must be met before any increase in the opening of schools:

1.     Much lower numbers of cases

2.     A national plan for social distancing

3.     Testing, testing, testing (regular for staff and children)

4.     Whole school strategy (ie test whole school and isolate when one case occurs)

5.     Protect the vulnerable

The NEU has also presented the government with a 250,000 strong petition against opening on 1st June if the five tests are not met which has also been supported by parents’ organisations.

NEU, NASUWT, UNISON, NAHT, GMB and UNITE unions have now all issued a joint statement to urge caution on reopening. The NEU has produced a stringent model risk assessment for schools, which we understand is being sent to Brent Council on Monday, and members are being advised on the areas of health and safety law that will protect them.

Meanwhile Brent NEU members have paid tribute to Pamela Mistry, a 50-year old teaching assistant who had, until recently, been employed at The Village School and was an active union member there. She sadly died of coronavirus in April after several weeks in hospital, leaving a much-loved partner, children and grandchildren. NEU members and colleagues, denied the chance to attend a funeral due to lockdown, have posted in an online condolence book, paying tribute to Pamela and her lovely family, and describing her as a beautiful, kind and caring lady. One member describes her as a lovely, kind lady who spoke about her family and partner every day sharing funny anecdotes. Staff have been devastated by the news and have said she will never be forgotten.

Staff and children across our Brent schools have suffered family losses too, with the high number of cases in Brent. Brent Council have been consulting unions on their school strategy during the lockdown. Unions are extremely likely to strongly resist anything other than a cautious, phased approach in line with the five tests advocated by the NEU.

Friday, 8 May 2020

Brent Cyclists lobby Council on Post-Covid-19 local transport


The Brent Cycling Campaign has published an open letter to Brent Council officials and councillors setting out proposals for 'A Shared Future' for local transport in the post-Covid-19 era.

The proposals would complement the 'London Streetspace' programme announced by Sadiq Khan and TfL LINK .

This is a tremendous opportunity to build on the gains we have all noticed in terms of air quality and other factors that have made our area more 'liveable' as a pleasant by-product of the current cruel crisis.

The full letter is below. Click on bottom right hand corner for full page version.




Thursday, 7 May 2020

VE Day – why they were celebrating then, and what it tells us now


Philip Grant, of Wembley History Society, reflects on difficult times, past and present.

‘Wembley Goes Gay!’ If you saw that headline now, you would think it was about a Pride march. But that was the headline in a local newspaper exactly 75 years ago, marking the borough’s celebrations for VE Day, the end of the Second World War in Europe.

1. "The Wembley News" title, from a 1944 edition. (From a copy collected by the late Richard Graham)

I had hoped to show the actual headline, which I saw on a microfilm some years ago, but I have been “staying at home” for nearly two months. With our libraries also now closed, and my friends at Brent Archives working from home, they have not been able to access the local newspaper microfilms to retrieve it for me. 

I first thought of writing an article to mark this 75th anniversary before the Covid-19 emergency. I can’t help seeing some similarities, as well as differences, between the situation now, and what it was like, in the Wembley area in particular, during the Second World War. Will we have a party to celebrate when the coronavirus outbreak is over, as it certainly will be, one day?

2. A street party in Church Lane, Kingsbury, 1945. (From “Brent’s War”, published by Brent Libraries, 1995)

There was good reason to celebrate then. Britain had been at war for nearly six years when the remnants of Hitler’s German regime surrendered in May 1945, but the shadow of the conflict had hung over the country for even longer. In December 1937, the government asked local councils to start making air raid precautions (“ARP”). Early the following year, because of fears that Germany would use poison gas as a weapon against civilians, and not just on battlefields as in the “Great War”, millions of gas masks started to be issued.

Wembley’s choice for its ARP Officer in February 1938 may have surprised some. Jack Eddas, had been appointed as an Entertainments Manager in 1937, a temporary post to organise celebrations for King George VI’s coronation, and the Urban District being elevated to Borough status. The Council had seen how good his organisational skills were, and chose the right man. 

Within a few weeks, he had started recruiting Air Raid Wardens, and setting up a training programme. His planning would see 2,500 wardens in place by the time war was declared. Some were employed full-time, at £3 a week, but 95% of the men and women were volunteers. They were organised into teams, based on eighty warden posts across the borough, fifty of these in specially built blast-proof shelters.

3. Wembley's Warden Post No. 32, c.1939. (Image, possibly IWM Collection, from a 1964 magazine article)

When the photo above was taken, the wardens had yet to be given uniforms, just a helmet and an ARP lapel badge. They had named Post 32 “Bell & Rattle”, after the equipment they were given to signal the all clear to, and threat of, gas attacks. Fortunately, no poison gas bombs were dropped, but air raids on Wembley began, with incendiary bombs, on 27 August 1940.

4. 443-449 Kingsbury Road, after the 25 September 1940 bombing. (Brent Archives online image 8536)

The borough’s first fatalities were suffered a month later. This time the Luftwaffe dropped parachute mines, a 500kg weapon that drifted through the air to kill indiscriminately (like the tiny droplets that carry the coronavirus). On the night of 25 September, Daisy Cowley and her baby son Robert, and Maud Hawkins and her 7-year old daughter Barbara, died in their flats above shops in Kingsbury Road. Minutes later, married couples John and Iris Pool and their neighbours, Bill and Caroline Western, were killed in their homes at District Road, Sudbury.

The King and Queen paid a surprise visit to the rescue services and survivors of the Sudbury blast. King George VI praised the wonderful spirit of the local people. Wembley had to survive many more months of “the Blitz”, until May 1941, although it got off quite lightly compared to some places. Keeping up morale was important, and messages of encouragement from the Mayor were part of the way that was done, then as now.

5. A message from the Mayor of Wembley to ARP workers. (Wembley A.R.P. Magazine, December 1940)

The Civil Defence workers whose efforts the Mayor was commending were more than just ARP Wardens. Other branches of the service included trained Rescue Teams, First Aid and Casualty Ambulance Units. These were based at a variety of locations around the borough, and would be called out from a control centre in the basement of the Town Hall, in Forty Lane. It was manned 24 hours a day by volunteers from the Council’s staff, who responded to emergency reports ‘phoned in by the wardens.

6. "Coat of arms" of one Wembley First Aid Post, and Mobile Unit from another. (Photo from Brent Archives)

The home-made “coat of arms” above was designed by a nurse’s husband, for her First Aid Post at Preston Manor School. The photograph shows the team at First Aid Post No. 5, based at a sports ground in East Lane. The nurse all in white was a Sister from Wembley Hospital, who led the team when she was not on duty there. In the days before the NHS, Wembley had a “voluntary hospital” in Chaplin Road, which opened in 1928. It was funded by charitable donations, a week-long summer Carnival and Fete, and a scheme where over 20,000 local residents paid sixpence a month, for free treatment in the “public wards” if they needed it.

A wartime Auxiliary Fire Service (“AFS”) was organised by Wembley’s professional Fire Brigade, set up in 1935 after forty years of a volunteer brigade. As well as their new fire stations at Harrow Road and Kingsbury Circle (now an ambulance station), it had units based at four garages across the borough. Their busiest night in Wembley was on “Black Friday”, 15/16 November 1940. Around 3,000 incendiary bombs were dropped, resulting in 62 separate call-outs. Many homes and business premises were damaged or burnt out.

7. Newspaper report of three A.F.S. deaths, “Wembley News” 17 January 1941. (Brent Archives microfilms)

As the article above shows, three of Wembley’s AFS volunteers died when a bomb fell beside their vehicle, close to St Paul’s Cathedral, as they were helping to fight fires in the City of London in January 1941. The widespread incendiary bomb attacks meant that, from February, compulsory Fire Guard duties were imposed on all eligible adults. Around 25,000 people, almost a quarter of Wembley’s total population then, had to spend 12 hours a week on fire-watching duties, organised on a rota system by ARP wardens for residential areas.

That was just one of the restrictions on everyday life that people had to put up with during the war. There was also rationing of food and other items. Petrol could only be obtained for essential business use. Travel to some places was restricted. The police were watchful, and shopkeepers, or anyone else who broke the rules, could be fined, or even sent to prison. As we see now, sometimes curbs on basic freedoms during an emergency are necessary.

Between May 1941 and February 1943, there was a lull in the bombing, but the ARP services had to stay vigilant. In February 1944, a pair of semi-detached Council houses at Birchen Close took a direct hit from a high-explosive bomb on a Saturday evening. Eight members of the Whitfield family and seven members of the Metcalfe family were killed. Even though they had lived just across the road from the graveyard at Old St Andrew’s Church, Kingsbury, they were buried at Alperton Cemetery, as was the case for all Wembley’s bombing victims. 

We have seen recently, in the news, the grim scenes of mass graves in New York City. Wembley also had contingency plans, and a site set aside, in case mass burials were needed. Thankfully they were not, so allotment-holders at Birchen Grove needn’t worry when digging!

8. Wembley Borough Council's WW2 Roll of Honour memorial. (Currently in storage at Brent Museum)
ARP Warden Henry Randall was injured by the blast from the Birchen Close bomb in February 1944, and died in hospital two days later. His name is on Wembley Council’s memorial to its staff who died ‘in the service of their country’ during the war, as is that of Horace Townley. He was killed when a bomb hit his ARP Post in Alperton, two weeks later. Albert Brooker, Stanley Conniff and William Knight, the three AFS men who died in 1941, are also honoured. They too had worked for the Council, as well as volunteering to be firefighters in their own time.

9. Photos of V1 Flying Bomb damage, from a recently rediscovered album. (With thanks to Jo Locke)

The final onslaught Wembley’s Civil Defence services had to deal with was V1 Flying Bombs. Fourteen of these “doodlebugs” fell on the borough between June and September 1944, and the first on 19 June was particularly hard to bear. Among the victims at Station Approach, Sudbury, were Cecil and Alice Hyatt, both ARP Wardens. Their son was in the Casualty Ambulance Unit based at Barham Park, and had married a young lady from that team earlier in the war. His wife, Joan, and their 2-year old son Rodney, also died at his parents’ home.

The second photo above shows Wembley Hill School, which was destroyed by a V1 in July. Luckily no pupils or teachers were in the building, but William Harris, on Fire Guard duty, was killed. For the rest of the war its pupils had to be spread around other local schools, meaning class sizes of 50 or more. Copland School was built on the site in the early 1950s.

At the end of 1944, some of the wartime censorship restrictions were lifted, and the full extent of the bombing and casualties was made public. Around 9,000 bombs had been dropped on Wembley, and more than half the homes in the borough had suffered some damage, with 528 being completely destroyed. 149 people had been killed in the air raids, over 400 seriously injured, and a similar number less badly hurt. Sadly, when the final figure for Covid-19 deaths in the area is known, it may be more than the wartime fatalities.

10. VE Day games at Audrey Gardens, Sudbury Court Estate - the potato in the bucket race.
11. VE Day games at Audrey Gardens - catching the train race. (Both photos courtesy of Judith Meredith)

With what local people had endured, it is little wonder that Wembley celebrated VE Day. As well as parties, neighbours came together to organise other simple entertainments, like the games for children shown in the photos above. They could finally relax, have fun, and look forward to a brighter future. The little girl in the race above thought the war ending would mean sweets were no longer rationed, but as now, it would take time for normal life to return.

 
One thing that the Second World War and the current emergency have in common is the number of people ‘doing just that bit extra for their neighbours’, as Wembley’s Mayor put it in his 1940 message. That community effort, as well as the vital efforts of those in the NHS, care services and other key workers, are something to be thankful for, and to build on in future.

12. The Defence Medal, for Second World War service. (Brent Museum, object no. 1977.166f)


How will we remember those efforts? Some people have suggested a medal, and there was one for civilians who had served on the “home front” for at least three years between 1938 and 1945. You can find out more about The Defence Medal, and about Wembley’s ARP services, on the Brent Museum website.

 
Another medal was the MBE, awarded to Jack Eddas in the 1941 New Year Honours. His work in preparing Wembley Council’s ARP services not only helped to save lives in the borough. It showed how an effective organisation should be run, and helped guide and provide training advice to other Councils across Middlesex.

Will there be “Roll of Honour” boards to remember those who have died from Covid-19, while working to look after others during the outbreak? That is something to think about, as we remember VE Day, 75 years ago, and why it was celebrated. Please feel free to share your own views.

Philip Grant.