More than 950 schools are near roads which have from harmful levels of illegal pollution, research found.
Danger of Polluted Playgrounds for Thousends of Children

Thousands of children are using playgrounds near to roads with illegal levels of pollution, according to new analysis.

More than 950 schools are near roads which have from harmful levels of illegal pollution, research found.

The findings that thousands of children are playing in playgrounds within 150 metres of roads with illegal air pollution across the UK comes from an assessment for environmental law charity ClientEarth of the latest government data.

A YouGov survey for the environmental lawyers found three quarters (76 per cent) of 1,141 parents and carers questioned want extra measures to protect pupils whose schools and playgrounds are in illegally-polluted areas.

More than half (57 per cent) of 1,658 adults questioned in the poll felt the Government was not acting quickly enough to tackle the UK's air quality problems.

Air pollution is linked to the early deaths of about 40,000 people a year in the UK, causes problems such as heart and lung diseases and asthma and affects children's development.

ClientEarth says children are being exposed to levels of nitrogen dioxide, NO2, at dangerous levels. There are legal limits on the levels of the toxic gas that can exist in the atmosphere.

ClientEarth is launching a Poisoned Playgrounds campaign which allows parents to see whether their child's school is near a road with illegal levels of air pollution, by entering the postcode into an online search.

Supporters of the campaign are being urged to put pressure on the Government, via their MPs, to take action to curb air pollution.

ClientEarth air quality lawyer Alan Andrews said: "Thousands of children in this country are playing in playgrounds near illegally polluted roads.

"This is a legal and moral failing of our political leaders that puts children's health at risk at a time when they are still growing and therefore vulnerable. Naturally, parents want something to be done. So do we."

The campaign also features a video of young children from two schools suffering from nearby air pollution.

Billboard adverts are going up in some of the most polluted towns and cities, including Birmingham, Cardiff, Derby, Glasgow, Leeds, London, Manchester and Southampton, with details of the number of schools in the area near polluted roads.

Katie Horwood, headteacher at Chestnuts Primary in Haringey, north London, said: "We have a duty to protect the health of children who attend the school. As well as educating them in class, we need to let them exercise in the playground.

"Pupils should be able to breathe healthy air when they are outside, but like many schools we have busy roads nearby and there seems to be a collective failure of those in power to take action to protect young people's lives and lungs."

She said while the school was doing what it could, action from the Government was needed to encourage drivers to move to cleaner forms of transport and ensure less traffic on roads near playgrounds.

ClientEarth wants a national network of clean air zones to keep the dirtiest vehicles away from illegally polluted areas and help for people to move to cleaner forms of transport, as well as efforts to prevent cars idling outside schools and to encourage walking and cycling instead of the school run.

It comes as a UN report warned that air pollution is continuing to "plague" Britain and that the Government is "flouting" its duty to protect the health of citizens.  UN special rapporteur on toxic waste Baskut Tuncak said he was "alarmed that despite repeated judicial instruction, the UK government continues to flout its duty to ensure adequate air quality." He said children and older people are especially at risk.

The Government says leaving the EU will provide an opportunity to improve air quality standards and there are plans for a "green Brexit".

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

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