P-06-1545 Stop forcing school children to undress in front of staff
peers in open communal rooms - Correspondence from the Petitioner
to the Committee, 21 January 2025
Dear Members of the Petitions
Committee,
Thank you for the opportunity
to comment on the attached document ahead of the Committee’s
consideration of my petition on 26 January 2026.
I welcome the continued
engagement with this petition. However, having reviewed the
attached document, I do not believe it adequately addresses the
core issues raised.
1. Overall view of the attached
document
The document largely reiterates
existing legislation and statutory guidance relating to
safeguarding, well-being, and school premises. While it affirms
that safeguarding and learner well-being are priorities, it does
not introduce clear, enforceable requirements to ensure
children can change with privacy and dignity.
The central concern of my
petition remains unresolved:
children in Wales can still be required, in practice, to undress in
open communal spaces for compulsory education activities, with no
guaranteed private alternative.
2. The document does not
address the issues raised for the following
reasons:
- No guaranteed right to
privacy
The document does not require schools to provide a private changing
option for pupils who request it. As a result, children’s
access to privacy remains discretionary rather than a protected
right, undermining Article 16 UNCRC (right to privacy) and related
protections under Articles 12, 19 and 23.
- Lack of enforceable
standards
References to “appropriate”, “sensitive” or
“adequate” arrangements remain undefined. There are no
minimum standards, ratios, or expectations for private changing
facilities, nor any mechanism to ensure consistency across local
authorities.
- Safeguarding risks remain
unmitigated
The document does not directly address well-established risks
associated with communal changing, including peer-on-peer abuse,
bullying, body-shaming, harmful sexual behaviour, or the misuse of
phones and cameras in changing areas.
- Disabled toilets continue to be
treated as a substitute
There is no explicit prohibition on using disabled toilets as the
primary private changing option, which creates access issues for
disabled pupils and amounts to an inadequate and discriminatory
workaround.
- No protection from punitive
consequences
The document does not prevent pupils from being penalised or
excluded from participation where they decline to change publicly
due to privacy, religious, cultural, disability, or mental-health
reasons.
- Inclusion and privacy are not
properly reconciled
While inclusion is emphasised, the document does not set out a
clear policy framework that guarantees choice — allowing
any pupil (including trans or gender-questioning pupils) to access
private changing without creating safeguarding gaps or forcing
others into shared undressing.
3. Further questions for the
Committee to consider
I respectfully ask the
Committee to seek clarity from the Welsh Government on the
following:
- Will the Government commit to
amending statutory guidance or regulations to require (not
merely recommend) private changing options in secondary
schools?
- What inspection or enforcement
mechanism will ensure that children’s privacy in changing
areas is assessed and acted upon (for example, through
Estyn)?
- Will clear national rules be
issued on technology use in changing areas, including explicit
device bans and supervision expectations?
- Will the Government prohibit
the use of disabled toilets as the default private changing
solution?
- Will schools be required to
ensure that no pupil is punished or disadvantaged for
declining to change in communal spaces?
- Will anonymised national data
be collected on incidents, complaints, or safeguarding referrals
linked to changing facilities?
4. Additional points for the
Committee’s attention
- This petition has highlighted
cross-generational, lived harm: adults reporting trauma from school
experiences and children currently opting out of PE due to lack of
privacy. This demonstrates the urgency of structural change, not
reliance on discretionary practice.
- The issue is not opposition to
inclusion. The petition calls for guaranteed choice, dignity, and
safety for all pupils — aims that are compatible with
inclusive education when properly implemented.
- Practical, low-cost mitigations
(staggered changing, screens, cubicles, clear device policies) can
be implemented immediately without waiting for major capital
investment.
5. Conclusion
The attached document reassures
the Committee that safeguarding and well-being are priorities, but
it does not close the policy gap that allows children’s
privacy to be compromised in practice. Without explicit national
direction and enforceable standards, pupils remain reliant on
goodwill rather than guaranteed rights and are currently at
immediate risk daily.
I therefore ask the Committee
to continue to press the Welsh Government to bring forward concrete
proposals to embed privacy, dignity, and safeguarding into school
changing arrangements.
Thank you for your continued
consideration of this petition.
Kind regards,
Louise Phillips
Petitioner, P-06-1545