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EDUCATION Secretary Gillian Keegan is under fire for blowing £34million revamping her offices — while schools struggle with unsafe concrete.

The work involves stripping out the 1990s interior over four floors of her department’s Westminster HQ.

Alamy Live News. 2RHGWCA London, England, UK. 17th Aug, 2023. GILLIAN KEEGAN, Secretary of State for Education, is seen in Westminster as he appears on TV breakfast shows. (Credit Image: ¿ Tayfun Salci/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE! This is an Alamy Live News image and may not be part of your current Alamy deal . If you are unsure, please contact our sales team to check.
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Shadow schools minister Stephen Morgan slammed Ms Keegan for having a £34million revamp of her offices as schools struggle with unsafe concreteCredit: Alamy
The Department for Education has appointed Willmott Dixon Interiors to undertake a multi-million pound refurbishment of its London offices.....CGI of the refurbished office space
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Ms Keegan signed off on the revamp plans in April while schools across Britainwere checking for dodgy reinforced autoclaved aerated concreteCredit: Supplied

Construction giant Willmott Dixon added there was a “focus on sensory, cognitive, physical or developmental needs, along with improved lighting and a muted colour palette”.

There will be a quiet room and a modernised kitchen.

Papers show the contract was awarded under Ms Keegan’s predecessor last year.

But she signed it off in April — when schools across Britain were checking for dodgy reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete.

READ MORE ON CONCRETE CRISIS

Earlier tonight, shadow schools minister Stephen Morgan said: “Despite Labour’s repeated warnings, the Education Secretary chose to make her office plusher instead of making schools safe for our kids.

“She needs to stop hiding, tell us what she and her colleagues knew about the dangers that children faced from this concrete and how the Tories plan to stop yet more disruption to kids’ education.”

The Department for Education insisted: “The project, which was initiated in 2019, will significantly reduce the annual maintenance costs of the building to the taxpayer and ensure officials can continue to work productively.”

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