Australia news LIVE NSW COVID-19 cases continue to grow as state ramps up vaccination measures sharp increase in infections in Victoria
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The mayor of Hume City Council, Joseph Haweil, has warned that many residents in Melbourne’s northern suburbs where COVID-19 has taken hold have been unable to get an appointment to receive their first vaccine.
Of the 324 new coronavirus cases reported on Thursday, 195 new infections were in the northern suburbs. Another 102 were in the west.
The Victorian government has begun shifting vaccines from other parts of the state to Melbourne’s north and west, but Health Minister Martin Foley yesterday acknowledged more needed to be done.
“We’re calling on the Victorian government to allow us to play a part in vaccinating residents. We want to make it easier for our community to access the vaccine and we’re in a position to do that,†Cr Haweil said.
“The reality is that many residents can’t get an appointment.â€
The Council has experienced nursing staff and bilingual workers, Cr Haweil said, as well as community centres that could be rolled into the program to boost vaccinations.
He wants to see pop-up vaccination sites and mobile jab vans, walk-in arrangements, increased capacity and supply, and a mass communication effort using translators.
Hume has among the lowest rate of vaccination in Victoria.
NSW Deputy Premier John Barilaro was on Seven’s Sunrise a short while ago.
He was asked whether Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant supports the state’s road map. As we mentioned earlier, some public health experts have expressed concerns over NSW’s plan to open gyms, restaurants and cafes once the state reaches its 70 per cent double-dose vaccination target.
NSW Deputy Premier John Barilaro.Credit:Dominic Lorrimer
Some are worried about what the road map will mean for the state’s hospital system.
Here’s what Mr Barilaro had to say this morning:
I can assure you that [NSW] Health and Kerry Chant support the road map.
I spent weeks if not months on the roadmap, modelling what was happening overseas, looking at the federal government’s road map.
Of course you would like to see us to push it to 85 per cent [fully vaccinated], but there is risk in everything we do, and were confident at 70 per cent.
I want to make it clear ... [if the road map wasn’t endorsed] the KPI would be no hospitalisations, no debts. But we know that’s not the reality.
We have to find a balance.
A recycling centre and KFC restaurant in Melbourne’s northern suburbs, at the centre of Victoria’s growing outbreak, have been added to the state’s list of exposure sites.
There are now 1044 exposure sites listed on the Department of Health’s website.
Overnight, a bunch of establishments have been identified as tier-1 sites, meaning anyone who visited them at the specified time is considered a close contact and needs to quarantine for 14 days.
In Fawkner, a KFC restaurant on Sydney Road was visited by a COVID-19 case on Sunday, September 5 between 8am and 5pm.
At the Visy Board recycling centre on Reo Crescent in Campbellfield, building “N†has been listed as a tier-1 exposure site for Saturday, September 4 between 5am and 2.30pm. The same building has also been listed for Friday, September 3, 5am to 2pm.
The Hampton Road Fish and Chips shop in Essendon West is also listed for Saturday and Sunday between 10am and 8.30pm, and on Monday from 10am until 1.30am.
Many new tier two sites, requiring people to isolate until returning a negative test result, have also been published online.
Visit the Department of Health website for more details.
Top-level Victorian government officials are increasingly frustrated with the speed at which the state’s public health team is developing a plan out of lockdown, as experts call for more measures to control the spread of COVID-19.
As Victoria battles a growing wave of COVID-19 infections concentrated in Melbourne’s north and western suburbs, NSW is preparing to emerge from its lockdown in mid-October, despite having a larger number of new cases.
Premier Daniel Andrews (centre), Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton (left) and COVID-19 response commander Jeroen Weimar this month.Credit:Getty
The release on Thursday of NSW’s exit plan, which would allow gatherings and involve retail and hospitality “cautiously†reopening to the fully vaccinated, has put pressure on Victoria to look ahead.
Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton’s team was commissioned last month to produce a Victorian lockdown exit plan. Some government figures expected the work to have been completed by now, allowing the government to create positive incentives for Victorians to get vaccinated.
Instead, Victorians have been told only about a minor easing of restrictions at the 70 per cent first-dose milestone, which will include an extension of the travel limit to 10 kilometres and an increase in exercise time to three hours. There has been no indication of what freedoms will be permitted when 70 and 80 per cent of the population is double-vaccinated.
Read more about the situation in Victoria here.
Public health experts have expressed concern about NSW’s road map to reopening its economy, which they say appears to have been driven by industry rather than consideration of the state’s stretched hospital system.
Yesterday, Premier Gladys Berejiklian announced that fully vaccinated people in NSW would be able to visit gyms, pubs and households â€" subject to capacity limits â€" once the state reaches 70 per cent full vaccination. Larger gatherings, in stadiums and theatres, will also be permitted subject to capacity limits for the double-dosed.
Premier Gladys Berejiklian announced a suite of restrictions would ease once NSW hit 70 per cent full vaccination.Credit:James Brickwood
Grattan Institute health economist and former health bureaucrat Stephen Duckett said, even though the plan was subject to the significant caveat that local areas could be placed under tighter restrictions if cases rise, “one person’s freedom is another person’s going to hospitalâ€.
“It is an extremely risky strategy which guarantees an increase in the number of cases and the number of hospitalisations. The question is how NSW Health will cope in this environment,†he said.
More on NSW’s reopening plan here.
Some 200 foreigners left Afghanistan on a commercial flight out of Kabul on Thursday, the first such large-scale departure since US and other forces completed their frantic withdrawal more than a week ago.
The Qatar Airways flight to Doha marked a breakthrough in the bumpy co-ordination between the US and Afghanistan’s new Taliban rulers. A days-long standoff over charter planes at another airport has left dozens of passengers stranded.
Passengers board a Qatar Airways plane at Kabul airport on Thursday.Credit:AP
A senior US official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorised to talk to the media, provided the number of Westerners on the Qatar flight and said two senior Taliban officials helped facilitate the departure â€" the new foreign minister and deputy prime minister.
Read the full story here.
Good morning and thanks for your company.
It’s Friday, September 10. I’m Broede Carmody and I’ll be anchoring our live coverage for the first half of the day.
Here’s everything you need to know before we get started.
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