[Deleted User] wrote: » Just a thought - surely for contact tracing from these exams the best bet is the app... but with phones being turned off this will hinder its effectiveness massively?
Wonderstruck wrote: » You forgot those storms in October 2019 that hit the west quite badly (I think that was Oct 2019........ I am losing track at this stage). At this point they can't lose face and cancel again :pac: :pac:
Bask453 wrote: » Anyone else feel like the Law Society are treading a fine line in pushing ahead with these exams, there will be some scandal if an outbreak is traced back to one of the sittings, especially when literally every other professional exam has been moved to an online format, it's not like they didn't have time to prepare...
bobsyourbrief wrote: » Speaking of time to prepare, I was wondering back in March why they never had some kind of cancellation protocol in place before anyway? Everything seemed very on the fly and pushed to the very last second. Pulling the plug on the exams less than 24 hours beforehand too.
Hamerzan Sickles wrote: » I'm getting flashbacks to all of us posting in this thread just before the exams were cancelled last time.
Hiya1234 wrote: » Could just mean no one from those counties can sit the exam but the rest of us might be ok...
Lallers96 wrote: » I'd consider this essential travel imo.
spygirl wrote: » For now all we can do is keep plugging away. Lost a lot of study time last March worrying, hoping not to do it again. Get the head down revising and come up for air after the weekend, see what Monday brings. We will hear nothing before that either way. Doubt anyone in the office over the weekend. With that in mind, anyone have a copy of Oct 2019 Tort report?
Deleted User wrote: » I think they said essential travel is workers who can’t work from home , medical appointments and essential family visits! Don’t know if sitting an exam that will be on again in oct, for 3 hours in a room full of strangers would be considered essential!
Lallers96 wrote: » Nobody is going to police it are they though? It's all about whether you consider it essential or not to go. We're all going to be forced to wear masks, and we'll all be in rooms of no more than 50 people and also distanced. People need to get a grip
Deleted User wrote: » https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/7b237-special-advice-for-those-living-in-kildare-laois-and-offaly-friday-7-august-2020/ Essential travel pretty clearly defined here. Just because no one is policing it doesn’t mean it doesn’t have to be abided by.
Lallers96 wrote: » Nobody is going to police it are they though? It's all about whether you consider it essential or not to go. We're all going to be forced to wear masks, and we'll all be in rooms of no more than 50 people and also distanced. People need to get a grip. I don't mean to be insensitive in saying that, but there's a lot of wishful thinking here with some people about cancellation or moving it online. We're adhering to every guidline the hse has advised. We can't let a virus with a what? 98% survival rate stop us from doing things that ARE necessary
Hamerzan Sickles wrote: » I would not be surprised if most candidates defined a training contract hanging in the balance as "essential travel" regardless of what county they are from.
bobsyourbrief wrote: » I personally can't see it being cancelled, but people have the right to worry after what happened to the last sitting in March and that should be respected.
vid36 wrote: » We are training to be solicitors and should conform with the highest ethical standards. The Law Society cannot promote flagrant disregard of public health regulations. In fact, if the exams are to continue they should prohibit those from the affected countries sitting them.
Lallers96 wrote: » There's worry, and there's baseless fear mongering. I saw the news and felt fine. I came here and saw the usual suspects spreading fear about cancellation when we have zero idea what will happen other than, as of now, the exams are going ahead and letting any other thought enter your head is a waste of time and a pointless source of stress as none of us can control this.
Lallers96 wrote: » That would require proof that these exams are not essential and I dare any invigilator tell a law student, of all people, from any of these counties that they are barred from the exam without such proof.
Hamerzan Sickles wrote: » As always spygirl comes out as the undisputed voice of reason in this thread.
vid36 wrote: » Exams are not essential. Read the government advice.If a student living in Kildare, Laois or Offaly sits an exam then the Law Society are in breach of public health regulations. They can lobby to change the regulations and I hope they do, but as of right now, they would be in breach.