He adds: “I require all headteachers to seek detailed information from each member of staff who indicates that heshe is unable to attend work and thereafter you, as headteacher, need to assess these `reasons’ against the criteria within personnel guidance. Thereafter you, as headteacher, need to decide whether or not any member of staff’s pay should be withheld.”
Drew Morrice, assistant secretary of the Educational Institute of Scotland, said his concerns about the Moray letter were that: it left the decision about withholding pay to the headteacher, which would inevitably lead to inconsistencies; and it did not make clear that teachers should be able to report to their nearest educational establishment.
He called on teachers’ local negotiators to update such policies. He hoped this would allow teachers to report to their nearest school, rather than being tied to a particular place of work; thereafter, if they were required to do development work, to be able to do so at home.
Mrs Matier argued that heads should have greater professional discretion to allow staff members to work from home. She criticised Glasgow City Council’s edict that teachers at her former school, Caledonia Primary, had to attend when burst pipes flooded the school; only if it became too cold could they go to the nearest school with heating.
A council spokeswoman said this was normal procedure after 25 schools and nurseries had to close.
In England, John Dunford, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, made a plea that schools should not be penalised for poor attendance when pupils could not get there.
A spokeswoman for the Scottish Government said: “Attendance and absence figures are calculated against the days that the school is actually open. Where a school is shut, the total number of days where attendance is expected is reduced accordingly. This can happen for a variety of reasons including poor weather, elections, in-service days and so on.
“Within the `other authorised absence’ category, there is the opportunity to record a pupil’s absence as being due to `lack of transport’ - including due to bad weather.”