Instagram and twitter. Thank you for watching and we will see you soon. Good morning. Welcome to breakfast with rogerjohnson and sally nugent. Our headlines today a call for schools in england to open at evenings and weekends. The childrens commissioner says theyll be safe spaces to keep pupils away from gangs and violence. Hundreds of people could be trapped as floodwaters rise after Hurricane Dorian lashes North Carolina. Mps from across the political divide are ready to go to court to force the Prime Minister to seek a delay to brexit. Good morning. Late wickets leave england in trouble in the fourth ashes test. Theyre still nearly 300 runs behind australia, so face a battle to save the match and the series. Ahead of tonights strictly launch, saffron barker and i check out fellow dancer will bayleys moves as the Paralympic Champion prepares for the european para table tennis championships. Good morning. Theres lots of dry, settled weather through the weekend. Just the odd isolated shower, but with clear skies by day, that means chilly conditions overnight. Ill have all the details coming up shortly. Good morning, its saturday the 7th of september. Our top story schools should stay open at evenings, weekends and holidays to help protect pupils from crime and gangs, according to the childrens commissioner for england. Anne longfield said children no longer feel safe on the streets, and that opening classrooms outside of usual hours could offer a safe space. Jane Frances Kelly reports. Bell rings the school bell marks the end of the day, but the childrens commissioner for england would prefer it if pupils stayed on for a range of activities, rather than going straight home. Anne longfield fears too many children are ending up indoors, stuck in front of their computers during theirfree time, because they dont feel safe playing outdoors. She warns that in more and more areas, gangs are operating in streets and parks, grooming increasingly younger children. To help tackle the problem, she would like schools to open at weekends, evenings and during School Holidays to provide a safe place for extracurricular activities. Anne longfield says about £2. 6 billion a year of extra funding is needed to allow schools to stay open out of hours and to provide more high quality Youth Support in communities. To put that cost in context, its as much as the promised increase in School Funding across the whole of england for 2020 2021. One Head Teachers Union has welcomed the idea, saying it would require extra money and careful planning but could create time for arts and sports, which are increasingly squeezed out of the school day. The government says its making record investments in education and Childrens Services to help young people overcome the challenges they face. Jane Frances Kelly, bbc news. Officials in North Carolina are warning that hundreds of people may be trapped as floodwaters rise following Hurricane Dorian. The storm is sweeping across the us state after devastating the bahamas, where hundreds of people are reported to be missing. Our correspondent david willis sent this report. Dorian grazed the carolina coast but certainly left its mark, leaving hundreds stranded amid rising floodwaters after they ignored a warning to leave. But the lashing winds and torrential rain bore little comparison to the destruction wrought earlier in the week. Hundreds, possibly thousands of people are missing on the tiny island of abaco in the bahamas, and many fear the place will never be the same again. I honestly believe abaco is finished. I think abaco will not recover until the next ten years. Like, fully recover, because everything is gone. Absolutely everything is gone. A few miles off shore, the crew of a british ship, the rfa mounts bay, is spearheading what looks to be a massive relief operation. The United Nations believes more than 70,000 people here are in urgent need of food and water. But the aim is to evacuate as many as possible to neighbouring islands, not least because those who remain face being homeless for months. Dorian, for its part, has now headed out to sea, weaker than it was a week ago but still capable of doing serious damage. Its expected to make landfall again in nova scotia, canada, sometime this weekend. David willis, bbc news. The bbc understands a group of mps, including some rebel conservatives, has assembled a legal team to try and force borisjohnson to seek a delay to brexit. The Prime Minister has been adamant the uk will leave the eu at the end of the october. Lets get more on this from our Political Correspondent matt cole, whos in oui london newsroom. Borisjohnson said he would rather be dead in a ditch than ask for an extension so is this likely to force his hand . There are many who think he is rather boxed in at the moment. He has got two choices, a law has been passed and they are waiting for royal assent and it is about to become law that will force him to write to the eu and ask for an extension to the october 31 exit deadline and if he has not got a deal done by october the 19th, so his choices are to break the law and not ask for the extension or to break his promise that he would not ever do that, but he would rather die ina ever do that, but he would rather die in a ditch. So there is concern he has been quoted as saying that in theory he has to follow the law. I think therefore mps, we understand, largely tory rebels, some of those who were sacked this week for voting against borisjohnson, who were sacked this week for voting against boris johnson, have who were sacked this week for voting against borisjohnson, have lawyers ready in case the october 19 deadline comes and borisjohnson then does not write the letter. As a consequence they are lining up to make sure they have enough time to go through the courts and force him to do that. Still by no means clear whether he would do that or take a different option, design perhaps and perhaps getjeremy different option, design perhaps and perhaps get Jeremy Corbyn different option, design perhaps and perhaps getJeremy Corbyn into number ten to make that decision and then head us to a general election to make us make the decision afterwards. Thank you, matt. A large number of Small Businesses say they still arent ready for a no deal brexit, according to a survey from the british chambers of commerce. The organisation, which represents tens of thousands of Small Businesses in the uk, has found two fifths of companies havent made contingency plans, and theres a lack of awareness about new customs regulations. Our Business CorrespondentKatie Prescott has more. Here in southampton, these warehouses are filled to the rafters. Meachers Logistics Stores everything from food to car batteries and takes it on to where it needs to go. But not knowing when and how well leave the European Union is causing problems for them and their customers. We are so reliant on what the changing environment will be between the eu and uk and what decisions are made, just to how hard the brexit is, but pretty much, we are there in capability, but not necessarily with the manpower well need because you cant employ people with no work to do. Its very hard for businesses, particularly those who are are its very hard for businesses, particularly those who are pressed delivering orders or dealing with contracts to try to hit a moving target, and thats exactly what theyve seen over the past three years. Those firms who have been able to do some preparations have done them. Many others have been watching and waiting, hoping for a resolution to the question, so that they can then prepare with greater confidence. And right now, a lot of businesses still dont have the basic information that they need, either, in order to take those steps and make those preparations. The government says it has put in place a lot of support for Small Businesses to raise awareness about what they need to do. Theres a website with comprehensive information for different sectors, a £10 million Brexit Readiness Fund for trade associations, and a finance council to support investment in Small Businesses. But for Companies Like meachers, theres one thing that politicians arent giving them that they want, and thats certainty. Katie prescott, bbc news, southampton. The bbcs announced a collaboration with three big social media platforms to try to tackle the spread of fake news. Google, twitter and facebook have been involved in drawing up a plan, including improved online education. Technology firms have been accused of not doing enough to tackle the issue. Indias attempt to become the first nation to land a spacecraft near the moons unexplored south pole has apparently ended in failure. Contact with the craft was lost moments before its module was due to touch down on the surface. Its not yet known what happened to it. Indias Prime MinisterNarendra Modi has said hes proud of the programme, and promised more opportunities to explore the moon in the future. It is ten past seven. You are up to date. The artist Alison Lapper has told breakfast that her son parys, who died suddenly last month, was failed by Mental Health services. Parys, who was 19, was found dead in a hotel room. His mother says he suffered with depression, had been bullied when he was at school, and struggled to find appropriate professional help. John maguire reports. Never, ever thought id have a baby. To be doing this is amazing. It is brilliant. A dream come true, really. Its fabulous. In the year 2000 the artist Alison Lapper took pa rt 2000 the artist Alison Lapper took part in the groundbreaking bbc series child of our time. Her son pa rys was series child of our time. Her son parys was one of the 25 babies born that year and his development and childhood the programme has charted ever since. Well my boy was beautiful, i am ever since. Well my boy was beautiful, iam biased, i know, very bubbly, full on, i have filled him running around and i forgot exactly when he was little at a bag of energy he really was. I had a boy that went from being mr confident, like his mum, to i could not get him out the front door. He would not get ona train. Out the front door. He would not get on a train. You know . What was i supposed to do . Last month, alisons son was found dead, alone in a hotel in sussex. In recent years, he had struggled with Mental Health issues. And i miss him. And i think it is such a waste of his life. Why . Why . I dont understand. Because he was beautiful and he had so much to offer. And i felt like beautiful and he had so much to offer. And ifelt like i couldnt protect him. Properly. Because thats what youre supposed to do as a parent is protect. And ifelt that i. A parent is protect. And ifelt that i,i a parent is protect. And ifelt that i, ifeel now, i didnt do it well enough. But i didnt know how. An inquest is yet to be held into his death but paryss mother believes bullying at school, depression and a lack of appropriate Mental Healthcare may all have been factors. If anything good can come out of losing parys then it has to be that, you know, somebody has to speak out. I mean, i have heard from so many mothers who have got lads inexact with the same position and they are tearing their hair out, they are tearing their hair out, they do not know what to do. There are they do not know what to do. There a re less they do not know what to do. There are less units now. If youre child needs to be sectioned, they could be in scotland and you could be in wales. It doesnt make sense to me. At all. At one stage, alison says pa rys was at all. At one stage, alison says parys was placed in a unit specialising in anorexia, despite not having the condition. After a lifetime of overcoming obstacles herself, she now believes her greatest challenge will be to help change the system that, she says, failed her son so tragically. Sad story. That report from john maguire. A spokesperson for the department of health and social care said it is vital that anyone can access specialist treatment as quickly as possible, and that it was working with experts to review training and Education Resources to help professionals spot and treat eating disorders quickly. It is just it isjust coming up it is just coming up to 1a minutes past seven. We have been talking about Hurricane Dorian this morning on the other side of the atlantic. You are starting over there for us, sarah . We will start with looking at Hurricane Dorian because this storm is packing a very powerful punch. This is the satellite image from the last 12 hours or so stop the eye of the storm is tending to fill, so it is weakening a little bit, but it is Still ProducingHurricane Force winds as it makes landfall in nova scotia. We have hurricane warnings there. Then the remnants of the storm start to move up towards iceland by the middle part of the week. So the implications for us in the uk, we will be seeing a little bit of windier and slightly wetter weather for the bit of windier and slightly wetter weatherfor the middle part of bit of windier and slightly wetter weather for the middle part of the week. But we are certainly keeping a very close eye on that hurricane at the moment. For us, it is a serene start to the day. This is the picture in salt ash in cornwall, a beautiful sunrise out there. Things are looking mostly dry and settle, just a few isolated showers here and there saltash. Parts of Eastern England will keep those showers through the day. But those hours will tend to fade, High Pressure building in from the west. A northerly breeze for scotland on the eastern coast of england as well, so one or two heavier showers for east anglia and the far south east. For Northern Ireland in the far south of england, a few showers, but most places should avoid them. Temperatures generally somewhere between about 17 and 19 degrees. That should feel reasonably pleasant with the blue sky, but cooler along the east coast. And the ashes continue at old trafford. We expect drier conditions with some long spells of sunshine and temperatures getting up to about 17 degrees or so. Getting up to about 17 degrees or so. Into the evening, i largely dry picture across the uk, and that is an indication that things will turn quite chilly. We could see a touch of frost across parts of eastern scotland, north east england as well. Even further south, those temperatures well down into single figures. And it is of course great north run tomorrow. After that cold and fresh start to the day, blue sky, lots of sunshine stop a light breeze, so pretty decent conditions for the runners there. Through the day, we will keep sunshine across parts of eastern scotland and for much of england and wales as well stop at cloud moves in from the north west. It will cloud overfor the western half of scotland, a little bit of patchy and light rain here in the middle part of the afternoon. Temperatures similar to today, 15 18 degrees. But we will lose that chilly wind from those eastern coasts. As we had to sunday night and on into monday morning, this frontal system works in from the western brings us a soggy start to the new working week. Many places will receive a bit of rainfall through the day on monday, and with all the cloud and the outbreaks of rain, it is not going to feel warm. Temperatures only at about 1k rain, it is not going to feel warm. Temperatures only at about 1a to 16 degrees for us on monday, but that range should clear away. It leaves a slightly drier spell of weather towards the middle part of the week. Temperatures will start to rise as we had through tuesday, but with the re m na nts of we had through tuesday, but with the remnants of that ex hurricane to the north of us, we could see a little bit of rain and some breezy conditions through the middle part of the week. We will of course keep you updated on the progress of that hurricane. Now it is back to you both. Just watching closely to see what the forecast might be at old trafford, for the cricket. I dont think they will be saved by the rain either. The uks top doctors are recommending that we take up activities such as tai chi, bowls, or even brisk walking to help us stay well when we are older. New National Guidelines being issued today say focussing on building strength and balance can help prevent falls in old age. We are joined now byjane mcdermott, a researcher in healthy ageing from the university of manchester, and susan spain, who is a nordic walking instructor. Good morning to you both. Good morning. Lets start with way balance is so important. We are saying balance and strength, why is balanced so important as we get older . Said the evidence is that from about the age of a0 we lose muscle mass at approximately 8 per decade. For those of us who are more sedentary, it is probably higher than that because we all sit in offices, so we know that this is really important. In orderfor us offices, so we know that this is really important. In order for us to age well and you have a good later life, to be able to do the things that are really important to us, to remain independent, to stay connected to our communities. So it isa connected to our communities. So it is a critical part of ageing well. And does nordic walking