School suspends sisters for taking part in protest then 'dumps them at wrong farm'
Alice Hatt has been left "fuming" after a teacher at Sir James Smith's School in Camelford, Cornwall, drove her daughters to the wrong address after they were suspended from school
by Kelly-Ann Mills, Lee Trewhela · The MirrorA livid mum has vowed to take further action after learning her daughters were suspended from school for participating in a welly boot protest.
Alice Hatt and her partner are absolutely "fuming" following claims that a teacher drove the girls "home" to a farm that wasn't theirs and left them unsupervised for two hours.
Alice's family rears beef and sheep on an expansive 800-acre plot at Tregrylls Farm, Lesnewth, located between Boscastle and Davidstow.
With the government shaking up inheritance tax laws, the children looming as future inheritors of the land were eager to join in the London protest this Tuesday but farming duties beckoned, holding the family back.
Kimberly, 12, and her sister Pippa, 13, decided to make their stand by wearing wellies to Sir James Smith's School, Camelford, emulating what many young farmers around the nation did on Tuesday, reports Cornwall Live.
Alice explained: "The girls wanted to do it and I was very proud of them that they stood up for what they believe in and they didn't back down. However, after about an hour and a half I got a phone call from the school saying I needed to bring shoes in for the girls. I told them we were out TB testing so couldn't get there until the end of the day.
"I asked if they could just wear wellies for one day to support farmers, but they said 'no, if they're not going to change their shoes, they're suspended'. So they put my two girls in a car with a teacher who drove them to a farm we farm but don't live at. They didn't even take them to the farmyard, they drove them halfway down the lane and left them there for two hours unsupervised. It's literally just a farm with animals and slurry pits - all the dangers that a farm has."
She alleges that after two hours, a school staff member collected the girls from the deserted farm and returned them to Sir James Smith's. "They missed lunch and had to wait until 3pm when I could pick them up," their mum added.
Alice is determined to escalate the matter: "Surely you have no right to be driving my children anywhere and leaving them unsupervised?" The family are among many in the area who have allowed their children to participate in the welly protest.
"The school didn't like it, even though we had to support them when the teachers were protesting. My kids had five days off school last year because they were all up London protesting their pay. I find it very hypocritical to be honest with you."
"They were in full school uniform, they had their wellies on as well, which were clean. They didn't go to school covered in dirt or anything. It was one day to make a stand when they [teachers] had five days last year to make a stand for their cause. The girls weren't doing it to follow a crowd, they were doing it because it's their life and future."
The family own their farm so hoped their children will one day inherit it. "That was the plan but obviously nothing's going smoothly with that anymore. I think the inheritance tax is an absolute disgrace. It's a kick in the teeth to farmers everywhere."
Another mum in the area, who is friends with Alice, took to Facebook to say her children would also be taking part in the welly protest. Posting the day before the protest, she said: "Let's make this very clear - my children will be wearing wellies tomorrow at school. I think it's disgusting that the schools have not made more of a statement supporting our farmers, especially as we are a country community and a large amount of our families in school are farmers."
"Don't use the excuse of school policy as they can dress up for Children in Need, Halloween and any other charity or time that suits. I'm pretty sure that this is one of the biggest things in the country that needs to be supported now and for the future, and people need to be educated about the effects of farming and, God forbid, not having farmers."
She added: "The schools are so worried about A* student grades and how it makes them look on paper, but none of this teaches them how to live, to feed themselves and how to look after the countryside we live in. So YES my children will be wearing wellies to support our lifestyles, our livelihood and our country."
Despite repeated attempts to reach out to Sir James Smith's School and the Westcountry Schools Trust, which oversees the school, for a comment on Alice's concerns, there has been no response. Nevertheless, the school did express support for Tuesday's protest on social media, sharing a photo of several students donning wellies.
The post read: "At SJS we value our young people's voices. Today a group of students want to support a farm protest that is taking place nationally."