Victoria reports six new coronavirus cases on first day of snap lockdown
Victoria reported six new locally acquired coronavirus cases on Friday morning as the state awoke to its fifth lockdown of the pandemic.
There were 10 new cases reported on Friday morning, four of which the state had already announced yesterday.
All the cases have been linked to the original outbreak.
Reported yesterday: 10 new local cases and 1 new case acquired overseas (currently in HQ).
– 17,188 vaccine doses were administered
– 33,129 test results were received
More later: https://t.co/lIUrl1hf3W#COVID19Vic #COVID19VicData [1/2] pic.twitter.com/UgjjA8fAzV— VicGovDH (@VicGovDH) July 15, 2021
More than six million Victorians again found themselves living under stay-at-home orders on Friday, after Premier Daniel Andrews implemented a snap five-day lockdown from midnight in a bid to stop the spread of the Delta COVID-19 variant.
The premier says he hopes the state’s fifth lockdown is “short” and “sharp” but cannot guarantee it will only last five days.
Once again, residents have only five reasons to leave home.
These include shopping for essential items, outdoor exercise for up to two hours and no more than five kilometres from home, essential work or study where it cannot be done from home, compassionate or medical care, and travelling to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.
Mr Andrews said the state’s contact tracers and public health experts were moving “faster than they ever have”, but that they’re “just keeping pace with this virus, not getting in front of it”.
“That is why, with a heavy heart … the Chief Health Officer and public health team have recommended to me and my colleagues that we lock down Victoria from 11:59pm tonight until 11:59pm next Tuesday night,” he said.
This will be the state’s fifth lockdown since the start of the pandemic and the third in 2021.
There are now 18 active COVID-19 cases in the community associated with two outbreaks in Melbourne, both originating from NSW.
Premier Andrews said the lockdown would be identical to the most recent one from a few weeks ago.
“If you were authorised to work then, you will be authorised to work now. If you were closed then, you will be closed now,” he said.
Businesses who received support during the last lockdown will likely receive the same support over this period, he said.
“In terms of business support, I’ll have more to say as early as tomorrow and we will look to fast-track payments principally to those who received payments last time,” he said.
“We expect the Commonwealth government will step up and help those people who need the help.”
The premier stressed he would have preferred the outbreak “had not come to our state”.
“We’d prefer we didn’t have to deal with these issues but this is so infectious. This is such a challenge that we must do this. You only get one chance to go hard and go fast,” he said.
“If you wait, if you hesitate, if you doubt, then you will always be looking back, wishing you had done more earlier.
“I am not prepared to avoid a five-day lockdown now only to find ourselves in a five-week or a five-month lockdown.”
Mr Andrews said he is “hopeful” the lockdown will not be extended beyond five days, but acknowledged it was a possibility.
“It may be longer because it depends on what every Victorian does,” he said. “Millions of Victorians making dozens and dozens of choices every day means there are lots of variable points here.”
Asked whether the imposition of the lockdown on regional Victoria was “fair”, he said: “Look, nothing about this virus is fair. Nothing about the fact that this virus has travelled from Sydney is fair. That’s just the reality we face.
“I apologise to all Victorians that this is necessary. But part of my job is not just making popular and easy decisions, it’s doing what must be done and at this stage a state-wide lockdown is what’s put to me as essential by the public health experts.”
Several hundred people gathered outside Flinders Street Station on Thursday night to protest the latest lockdown, listening to speeches and chanting “sack Dan Andrews”.
A flare was lit as they marched to parliament. Police confirmed no arrests were made.
Victoria records two additional COVID-19 cases
Premier Andrews said the state had recorded two additional cases since a previous update earlier on Thursday.
One of the new infections is an additional case linked to an AFL match between Carlton and Geelong at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Saturday. The other is a close contact of a resident from the locked down apartment building, Ariele Apartments in Maribyrnong, where NSW removalists who breached their worker permit conditions spread the virus during a drop off late last week.
Of greatest concern are the now three cases linked to the MCG, which appear to be linked to an infectious Maribyrnong man who attended the match and was seated in the member’s reserve on level two.
Mr Weimar said the trio are not known contacts of the infected man and it appeared to be a case of “stranger-to-stranger transmission”.
“They were sitting in very different parts of the ground. There’s no obvious relationship between them. The interviews and discussions are ongoing,” Mr Weimar said.
“Obviously we are working with all three new cases today identified at the MCG. They’ve got a number of exposure sites and some of those exposure sites are acting there already and we will continue that work over the course of the evening and into the night.”
A positive case also attended the international rugby clash between the Wallabies and France at AAMI Park on Tuesday night, with stadium management working with health officials to identify close contacts.
There are more than 110 exposure sites across Melbourne and regional Victoria, including the MCG and several stores at Chadstone shopping centre. Some 1,500 primary close contacts and 5,000 secondary contacts are currently self-isolating.
Mr Weimar said around 20,000 coronavirus tests have already been received on Thursday.
Commonwealth payments
The federal government said on Thursday night it would provide income support through the COVID-19 Disaster Payment scheme for people who work or live in Greater Melbourne, Moorabool Shire, City of Greater Geelong, Borough of Queenscliffe and Surf Coast Shire – areas declared COVID-19 Hotspots for the purposes of Commonwealth support.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison is also expected to propose a more “streamlined” set of financial supports for states and territories affected by the COVID-19 pandemic when National Cabinet meets on Friday.
Under Mr Morrison’s proposal, support payments of either $375 or $600 a week – depending on work hours lost – would start from the second week of a lockdown but be paid in arrears, and the liquid assets test would be immediately waived.
Tasmania closes border with Victoria
Tasmania has announced it is closing its border with Victoria in response to the emerging outbreak.
“This decision has been made with the intention [of] ensuring the protection of Tasmania of the risk posed by COVID, particularly the Delta strain,” Deputy Director of Public Health, Scott McKeown, told reporters on Thursday night.
Anyone who has been in Victoria since 8 July won’t be allowed into Tasmania unless they receive express permission from the deputy state controller as an essential traveller.
Dr McKeown said the high-risk declaration would be reviewed daily.
Source: sbs