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Transcripts For BBCNEWS The Papers 20240707

liz truss, has promised immediate action on surging energy prices, as she faced her first series hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are annabel denham, director of communications at free market think tank, the institute of economic affairs, and anand menon, director of the think tank the uk in a changing europe, which describes itself as providing independent research on brexit and its impact. we will say hello and just a moment after we take a look at the actual front pages. the i previews tomorrow s announcement on energy bills, saying liz truss will unveil emergency support, but leaves questions over how it will be funded. the times reports that the £150 billion package will rely on government borrowing to hold bills steady for two years. about time, says the mirror. but the paper criticises the decision not to expand the windfall tax on oil and gas firms to pay for it. the new pm will revolutionise energy suppli

Norfolk nostalgia: Growing up in Diss in the 1960s

Teachers, parents and pupils across Diss welcome schools reopening

Teachers, parents and pupils across Diss welcome schools’ reopening Published: 09:00, 14 March 2021 Teachers in the Diss Express area have praised the “calm and joyful” return of children to classrooms after months of home-schooling. Last Monday, schools across England reopened to all pupils, following almost two months of only being open to children of essential workers – due to the winter spike in coronavirus cases and emergences of new variants. While there were some noticeable changes – secondary school pupils must be tested for the virus twice a week – teachers welcomed a return to some sense of normality. Rob Connelly, headteacher of Archbishop Sancroft High School, who has welcomed back pupils to the school. Picture: Mark Bullimore Photography.

Norfolk school Ofsted told to improve joins academy trust

Published: 12:12 PM December 29, 2020    St Benet’s Trust chief executive officer Richard Cranmer and Garboldisham Church Primary Academy head teacher Julia Humphrey. - Credit: Newman Associates PR A village primary school found to be inadequate in an Ofsted report that said pupils received poor quality of education has joined a multi-academy trust.  Garboldisham Church Primary Academy has become the eighth school to join the Diocese of Norwich’s St Benet’s Multi Academy Trust, which has a growing family of academies across south Norfolk. The school said the move would bring opportunities for collaboration, as well as helping improve the quality of its teaching.

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