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Fathers plan legal action to get smartphones banned in England’s schools

1 day ago
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Two fathers plan to take legal action against the government in an attempt to get smartphones banned in schools in England.Will Orr-Ewing and Pete Montgomery wrote to the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, on Friday warning that they would seek a judicial review.They argue that current guidance, which allows headteachers to decide how smartphones are used, is unlawful and unsafe for children.The Department for Education now has 14 days to officially respond to the letter, after which point the claimants can issue judicial review proceedings.The DfE said schools already had the power to ban phones and it was bringing in “better protections” from harmful content through the Online Safety Act.

A national survey ordered by Rachel de Souza, the children’s commissioner for England, published in April revealed that 90% of all schools in England have banned mobile phone use by pupils.The survey found that 79% of secondary schools allowed students to keep their phones while banning their use or display, while 8% required phones to be handed in, and 3% stopped pupils from bringing them to school altogether.The two fathers, who have brought their claim under the name Generation Alpha, argue that smartphones are still being used dangerously and the safest approach for children would be a complete ban on smartphones in schools.Orr-Ewing said there was evidence that devices were being used to access harmful “very violent or sexual” content or for cyberbullying.“We know that when children use smartphones they usually don’t do it in a safe way,” he said.

“Parents have told us about boys being filmed naked in the PE changing rooms and then shared across the school.”Girls were “being manipulated by predators on messaging platforms during lessons and in school toilets” and “tiny children” were being shown “graphic pornography” on the school bus by other children, he added.The fathers said a ban on smartphones was a “no-brainer”, and argued that children should only have “brick phones” to communicate with parents if needed.Sign up to Headlines UKGet the day’s headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morningafter newsletter promotionLast week government guidance from the DfE on keeping children safe at school acknowledged that some children might use smartphones to bully or sexually harass other children, share indecent images and access and share pornography.Schools should “carefully consider how this is managed”, it stated.

Montgomery said there was evidence that schools were still not taking the necessary steps to safeguard children.The pair made freedom of information requests to schools in England about safeguarding incidents related to smartphones and social media; one school had passed 55 such incidents to social services in the last academic year, 17 of which were referred to the police.“A statutory ban would be a huge relief for headteachers and parents alike,” he said.The DfE said: “Schools already have the power to ban phones, and we support headteachers to take the necessary steps to prevent disruption, backed by our clear guidance on how to restrict their use.We know there are wider issues with children’s online experiences, which is why we are also bringing in better protections from harmful content through the Online Safety Act.

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Post Office could hand ownership to staff amid review after Horizon scandal

Ministers are to consider handing over ownership of the Post Office to its operators after the Horizon IT scandal.The Department for Business and Trade (DBT) has published a green paper, starting the first big review of the scandal-plagued organisation in 15 years. The review, which will run until 6 October, follows the publication last week of the first part of the findings from a two-year public inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal.Ministers said part of the review would include looking at the ownership model of the Post Office, which is ultimately controlled by the government, including the possibility of mutualisation or a BBC-style charter model.Ministers have previously met representatives of post office operators to discuss the possibility of handing ownership to the network branch managers who run its 11,665 outlets

about 9 hours ago
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Bank of England governor says jobs slowdown could prompt rate cut; European markets fall after Trump tariff threat – as it happened

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.The pound has dropped to a three-week low this morning, after the governor of the Bank of England said it could make larger cuts to interest rates if the jobs market slows quickly.Andrew Bailey told The Times that “slack” was opening up in the UK economy, following the increase to employers’ national insurance contributions. That slack should create downward pressure on inflation.Bailey insisted: “I really do believe the path is downward” for interest rates

about 10 hours ago
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English water firm doubles CEO’s pay despite ‘elevated concern’ over finances

A water company serving 3.9 million customers in London and south-east England has doubled the pay of its chief executive despite the regulator saying it had “elevated concern” over its financial situation.Affinity Water said its chief executive, Keith Haslett, received £1.6m for the 2024-25 financial year, up from £709,000 the year before.Bosses’ pay at privately owned water companies has been under intense scrutiny in recent years as the public and politicians expressed increasing anger over leaking infrastructure and sewage spills into rivers

about 12 hours ago
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Pound drops after Bank of England says it could cut interest rates more if jobs market slows

The pound dropped to a three-week low after the governor of the Bank of England said it could make bigger cuts to interest rates if the job market slows too quickly.Andrew Bailey said “slack” was opening up in the UK economy, as higher taxes have squeezed employers.He told the Times: “I really do believe the path is downward” for interest rates. The bank rate stands at 4.25%, after four quarter-point cuts in the last year, and the Bank is next scheduled to make another decision on 7 August

about 12 hours ago
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Thames Water announces hosepipe ban as dry weather depletes reservoirs

Thames Water has announced a hosepipe ban as a record dry spring and summer has severely reduced water supplies.Households in Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, Berkshire and Wiltshire will be banned from using hosepipes to wash cars or water gardens from Tuesday 22 July.The ban will affect all OX, GL and SN postcodes, as well as RG4, RG8 and RG9.The recent hot weather has caused a large surge in demand as people water their gardens and keep cool in the heatwave.Nevil Muncaster, strategic water resources director at Thames Water, said he did not “anticipate the situation will improve any time soon”, adding: “We have to take action now

about 13 hours ago
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Tax pubs on profit not turnover, urges Greene King boss

The boss of the pub chain Greene King has called for changes to business rates to remedy “unfairness” that he said added to financial pressures on the struggling pubs industry.Nick Mackenzie, Greene King’s chief executive, said the business rates system of property taxes should be changed to a tax on profits.The British pub industry has complained that it is under pressure from a series of increasing costs. The trade body the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA) said last week it expected pub closures at a rate of more than one a day during 2025, adding to the 350 net closures during 2024. It said business rates were a factor in those closures

about 15 hours ago
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Scientists reportedly hiding AI text prompts in academic papers to receive positive peer reviews

about 21 hours ago
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Fathers plan legal action to get smartphones banned in England’s schools

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Brenda, 95, and her soft toys become unlikely stars on TikTok

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Ofcom head says age checks are ‘really big moment’ for children’s online safety

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Teach First job applicants will get in-person interviews after more apply using AI

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‘Workforce crisis’: key takeaways for graduates battling AI in the jobs market

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