News

Number of schools with at-risk concrete continues to grow

By on

The number of schools in England where at-risk concrete has been identified has risen to 174, according to the Department for Education (DfE).


Schools and NHS buildings made from reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) could be unsafe or face closure, the UK government has admitted.

Problems began during the school holidays, involving a number of incidents at schools including the collapse of a beam which had not appeared to be a critical risk.

According to the government’s updated list, most schools have been able to continue with face-to-face education, but there are some which have been forced to operate online. Others have opened temporary classrooms.

Schools and NHS buildings made from reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) could be unsafe or face closure, the UK government has admitted. Photograph: iStock

RAAC is a lightweight form of pre-cast concrete which is reinforced with metal. It was made in factories using fine aggregate chemicals (rather than coarse aggregate), which creates gas bubbles within it.

This method of construction makes it porous and permeable meaning that water ingress can cause the steel reinforcements within it to corrode. Predominantly used on buildings during the 1950s to 1980s, it was favoured because it was cheaper, quicker to produce and considered easier to install than standard reinforced concrete.

HSE says RAAC is now beyond its lifespan and may ‘collapse with little or no notice’. Daniel Kebede, General Secretary of the National Education Union, warned that the list of schools affected is “certain to grow” as further are inspected.

“There is still a lack of clarity and timeframe from Government on when all schools at risk will be investigated by qualified structural engineers to assess the extent of the problem and the measures that need to be put in place to rectify the presence of RAAC.

“Schools must now get all the support and help they need to ensure that a complete picture of the problem is given, and that proper measures to rectify are undertaken speedily. Portacabins and marquees are not a long-term solution. Our children deserve better.”

List of schools affected by RAAC here

NEWS


Istock 1196525774 Creditabhishek KUMAR SAH 500 Min

Noida government protest ban halts worker demonstrations over wage rises

By Orchie Bandyopadhyay on 15 May 2026

The annual International Labour Day on 1 May passed peacefully in Noida city’s industrial districts, after the local government instructed police to deploy more than 1,700 officers to prevent a repeat of earlier demonstrations by workers demanding higher wages and better working conditions that saw factories premises attacked, stones thrown at police and hundreds arrested.



Lawyer Male Istock 2194829590 Yourstockbank

Charity urges legal sector to take “practical action” this Mental Health Awareness Week

By Belinda Liversedge on 08 May 2026

As Mental Health Awareness Week (11–17 May) approaches, legal mental health charity LawCare is urging legal professionals and firms to move past simple "awareness" and commit to practical, everyday actions to combat the industry's soaring rates of anxiety and burnout.



Asbestos Sheet Worker Istock Lianem

Experts launch national Asbestos Taskforce to challenge UK’s “manage indefinitely” strategy

By Belinda Liversedge on 28 April 2026

The chair of a new Independent National Asbestos Taskforce has criticised the UK’s strategy around asbestos as ‘dangerously complacent’, saying the time has come for evidence-based removal.