Pupils 'taught in marquees' at safety-risk school
School pupils have been taught in "marquees and Portakabins" for more than a year due to safety fears, an MP warned.
Teaching at Sir Frederick Gibberd College in Harlow, Essex, has been repeatedly disrupted since September 2023.
The town's Labour MP Chris Vince said the school was deemed "unsafe", despite its brand new building opening four years ago.
When responding to Vince in the House of Commons, Education Minister Stephen Morgan said he was working to find a "permanent solution".
A survey concluded the school needed to be demolished as it may not be able to withstand an extreme weather event.
Parents have previously been told the school would be rebuilt and made ready for 2027.
Vince accused the Conservative government of wasting £29m on the school, which opened two years after it was built in 2019.
Pupils and teachers were thanked by Morgan for their "resilience" to the ongoing issue.
"We have delivered high-quality temporary modular accommodation that the school will use until its new permanent buildings are ready," the minister added.
"We will continue to work closely with the trust and the local community to find a permanent solution."
Speaking in 2023, Harlow's former Tory MP Robert Halfon apologised for the disruption and said it had been "an incredibly difficult time".
He said: "The government is taking full responsibility for resolving the situation and will fund the rebuild of the school."
The school closed its main building and sports hall in August 2023 following advice from the Department for Education and concerns over its "modular mode of construction".
Pupils were taught in temporary buildings on site as a result, although those in Year 7 were transported by bus to sister school Mark Hall Academy.
Further disruption was caused when a national shortage of temporary classrooms hampered teaching.
Following the delivery of a number of temporary buildings, the school then had power cables worth tens of thousands of pounds stolen from within them.
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