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- Date11/07/2019
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- About- A school has been forced to close after concerns about the possible risk of a landslide from quarry spoil. - A “medium” risk has been identified to Godre’r Graig Primary School near Ystalyfera, Neath Port Talbot, parents have been told. - Residents in nearby Pantteg moved out of their terraced homes in 2017 due to concerns over landslips. - Work to relocate to a single school site by September is under way and the summer holiday was brought forward. - Teachers at the small village school were told on Thursday afternoon and children were given letters to take home to parents. - Council leader Rob Jones said when he became aware of the risk his first thoughts were about an incident involving another school which ended in tragedy. - In 1966, the Aberfan disaster claimed 144 lives, including 116 children, when a coal tip slid down the mountainside, engulfing a school and the village - He said the hillside around Godre’r Graig was known locally as a “moving mountain” which had been an issue for more than a century. - And over the years a number of homes have had to be demolished in the Pantteg and Godre’r Graig areas. - The letter to parents said the closure decision had been taken based on concerns arising from a geological survey. - “Further investigative work is needed and, as a precautionary measure, the school will close early for summer,” it said. - “We will be keeping parents informed of developments and arrangements made to relocate all pupils and staff on to an alternative single site ready for September. - Mr Jones said he convened an emergency meeting with staff on Wednesday to discuss the report and a decision was then taken to shut the school and to extend the holidays by a further week. - “All the actions we have taken in this area are in order to protect and save life and when we are talking about children in a school, even low risk to me is too high a risk,” he said. - “But I have got to stress that these are preliminary findings and even with preliminary findings, I’m not prepared to take any risk where children are concerned. - “I think anyone will draw comparisons to, shall I say, schools that have been involved in this type of disaster previously and the potential of a disaster taking place here, and that was my first thought,” he said. - During the last school inspection in 2017 there were 158 pupils, from nursery school age up to 11. - Plans were drawn up in 2017 to consider merging Godre’r Graig primary with three others to create a new super school. 

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