An update on the School flood from Maureen Child:
Dear All
A few people have got back to me challenging the view in my latest Report, which is also the view of the management team of Portobello High School, that the damage to the school by a flood - which damaged several floors - was not cased by a deliberate act of vandalism. I still hold that view and I’ll tell you why.
This flood story has grown arms and legs in the telling. Initial thoughts and speculation have become facts in people’s minds – and in print. This speculation has been repeated in a Council Report to the Education, Children and Families Committee which will be considered tomorrow. I have talked with the Head Teacher and intend to challenge the Council report. I believe that it gives a false interpretation of what happened and threatens to damage the reputation of this excellent school community.
At worst, whether or not the action which led to the flood was deliberate is still an open verdict.
It is more likely that a hot water tap was inadvertently left on in a sink on the Friday and ran for several days. In the sink was a small piece of Perspex, is normally used for mixing paint and – probably - it slipped to cover the drainage hole. This was an art classroom, on the sixth floor, with a large array of ceramics which were undamaged.
The cupboard doors, which were supposed to have been ‘ripped off’, had - in fact - come off cleanly. School staff did a practical experiment and showed that it was impossible for two grown men to rip them off like that, even using tools. On further close inspection, it was clear the glue had dissolved, probably due to the steam and the heat.
There was no trace of any intruder on camera, and no sign of anything untoward.
I believe it is significant that the school had dealt with a previous small incident when someone had left a tap on, accidentally. The vagaries of the School’s hot water system are such that you can turn on the hot tap and nothing happens, then a few minutes later, it starts to flow. A similar thing may well have happened here, but that small piece of Perspex had slipped to cover the drainage hole and the resulting flood wasn’t discovered for several days.
This flood could have been caused by someone filling a bowl of a bucket, or finishing off clearing up, oblivious of the idiosyncrasies of the hot water system.
Once staff had looked at the scene and the situation more closely, there was no sign of a malicious act.
The school had absolutely fantastic support from officers in the Council and from all the contractors who put the school to back to rights in just one week – which was a tremendous feat. The school staff and pupils have been wonderful too. They do not need the cloud hanging over them of false accusations.
So - I would still say that there is NO real evidence that it was a deliberate act of vandalism. If evidence emerges, I’ll change my mind. But until then, I will persist in saying it was a very unfortunate accident and steps should be taken to ensure it does not happen again.
Maureen
You have to wonder about the people who are contacting their local Councillor to have her identify the incident as vandalism. What is their motive?
The latest schools letter in the Evening News
http://edinburghnews.scotsman.com/lette ... jp#2858100
is so sick it can only have come from one or maybe two minds involved in this debate. I'm incredulous at "Mary's" statement that pupils, parents, parent councillors etc ought to be "ashamed of themselves" for voicing concerns. - The author is clearly prepared to stoop to any level.
To me it doesn't matter much if its vandalism- the fact is; one running tap caused around 900 children to miss a week at school. This is entirely down to the vunerability of the unfit for purpose building.