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Tweed, Byron Bay and Kempsey to re-enter lockdown as NSW reports 1,022 new COVID-19 cases

The Tweed, Byron Bay and Kempsey local government areas in regional NSW are set to enter a week-long lockdown at 5pm tonight, as the state reports 1,022 new COVID-19 cases and 10 deaths.

Of the 10 people who died, six were not vaccinated. The fatalities included one person in their 50s, one in their 60s, two in their 70s, five in their 80s and one in their 90s.

The person in thier 90s is the third death linked to a COVID-19 outbreak at the Guildford aged care facility.

There have now been 48,061 locally acquired cases and 255 deaths reported since the start of the Delta outbreak.

There are currently 1,266 COVID-19 patients in hospital in NSW, with 244 in intensive care units and 118 requiring ventilators.

The new lockdown in the state’s north comes after local COVID-19 cases were uncovered.

NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard said the case in Byron Bay was brought in by an essential worker who travelled to the area from Sydney for work.

There was also a positive case in Tamworth, but stay at home orders are still under consideration because the person was not active in the community.

NSW’s vaccination goals remain on track, with 82.5 per cent of eligible people vaccinated with one dose and 53 per cent with two.

Friends bubble for under-18s
Meanwhile, there’s some much-needed respite for parents with younger children, with a ‘friends bubble’ kicking in at noon Tuesday.

The government has announced anyone aged 18 years or younger in NSW will be able to create a bubble of three friends and visit each other’s homes for play or study.

Mr Hazzard said the decision will have positive impact on the mental health of young people who have been in lockdown for months.

“Young people themselves, families generally, have been obviously finding it challenging that young people have not been able to have their friends over,” Mr Hazzard told reporters.

Everyone in the bubble must live in the same local government area, and any adults in the household must be fully vaccinated.

The changes come just in time for the NSW school holidays but parents will not be able to interact with other adults in the household and can only drop the children off and pick them up.

The government says the new freedoms are a result of high vaccination rates.

Many parents in NSW have been juggling homeschooling, working from home and caring responsibilities at home while in lockdown.

Source: sbs.com.au