But Education, Sport & Culture president Paul Le Pelley has fought back, stating they were based on a meeting that his staff had with fire officials in October.
His committee is backing a three-school model, but last year they had to commission a report to look at how the existing school sites could be used for the alternative scheme.
That stated the Guernsey Fire & Rescue Service had raised serious concerns about how firefighters would deal with a blaze at the large schools and that this might put firefighters at risk.
But the comments have been refuted by the four deputies behind the two-school model, while Fire and Rescue chief officer Jon Le Page said the size of schools did not matter as long as they met local safety standards.
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