Security guards hired for hotel quarantine in an attempt at social inclusion
By Richard Baker and Noel Towell
A senior Department of Jobs official has been removed from their role as evidence mounts that the decision to use private security guards at Melbourne’s quarantine hotels was partly driven by a well-meaning attempt to provide jobs under "social inclusion" policies.
A leaked email from another public servant, the department's deputy secretary for inclusion, also paints a picture of how rushed the implementation was, describing "heroic efforts" over a weekend in late March as bureaucrats became "expert in the delivery of hotel concierge services".
The revelations will increase pressure on the Andrews government over whether it put too much emphasis on finding jobs for marginalised Victorians without ensuring that those guarding hotel guests were trained in infection control and supervised by authorised officers.
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'It’s dire': Contact tracing delays threaten coronavirus fight
By Aisha Dow and Michael Fowler
Victorians with coronavirus are waiting more than a week to be interviewed by health officials, stymieing efforts to contain the disease and threatening the success of costly lockdown measures.
Contact tracing is meant to be initiated within 24 hours, but the long delays are leading GPs to instruct their patients to call their close contacts themselves and urge them to be tested.
“It’s dire,” said Dr Mukesh Haikerwal, a former national Australian Medical Association president who runs a respiratory clinic in Altona North.
“There's a lot of early intervention that is being stymied.”
The AMA in Victoria says the problem needs to be urgently addressed for the state to avoid repeated hard lockdowns, and resurgent case numbers when it moves out of stage four restrictions.
'Entitled, defamatory and deceptive': student rebellion at St Paul's
By Jordan Baker
Sydney University's scandal-plagued St Paul's College has seen a dramatic dispute erupt between senior students and management, leading to a blistering letter accusing the students of entitlement and deception, and threatening them with expulsion.
The trigger was third-year students’ decision to push back against management’s failure to consult them about the COVID-safe guidelines and a decision to rent out the college gatehouse.
But it comes after months of tension at the residential college, which was once known for its sexism and hazing but has been undergoing significant cultural change in the wake of a review by former sex discrimination commissioner Elizabeth Broderick.
There was a period of relative peace after the review, but when a new warden took over the college last October, senior students began to feel shut out of decision making.
ICC announces rejigged World Cup calendar after COVID-19 wreaks havoc
Dubai: Australia will now host this year's postponed men's Twenty20 World Cup in 2022 after the International Cricket Council announced a redrawn calendar on Friday.
The men's 2021 T20 World Cup in India will proceed as originally planned.
The ICC also confirmed the women's 50-over World Cup that had been scheduled for New Zealand in February and March 2021 will be moved to 2022.
Before the pandemic disrupted the game's calendar, Australia were scheduled to host this year's men's Twenty20 tournament in October and November followed by a 2021 edition in India.
Reuters
Bonnyrigg Plaza closes for deep clean, set to open on Saturday after customer tests positive
By Megan Gorrey
A shopping centre in western Sydney closed temporarily for cleaning after a customer tested positive for coronavirus.
Bonnyrigg Plaza centre management said the shopper visited the shops on Tuesday, August 4, for about an hour from 9am.
They spent most of that time at Big W and briefly went to Bonnyrigg Fruit World.
"The South West Sydney Public Health Unit has advised that no one has been identified as a close contact," centre management said in a statement.
"If anyone was at the centre during this time, please monitor your symptoms and get tested if you are feeling unwell.
"The health and safety of our customers, retailers and community remains our highest priority."
The shopping centre closed for a thorough clean on Friday afternoon and is set to reopen this morning.
Cairns predicts $2.2 billion hit to tourism
By Tony. Moore
In a good year, Cairns generates $3.5 billion in tourism dollars for far-north Queensland. Thanks to COVID-19, in 2020 it is tipped to earn just $1.3 billion.
"We are predicting in the 2020 calendar year a $2.2 billion loss," Tourism Tropical North Queensland chief executive Mark Olsen said on Friday.
"That is how bad we are predicting 2020 will be."
Building a vaccine: how advanced are scientists in this global race?
By Deborah Snow
What do ferrets in a high-tech, high-security CSIRO bioresearch facility in East Geelong have to do with a COVID-19 vaccine being developed by Oxford University, 17,000 kilometres away?
More than you might think. The link between these far-flung teams of scientists provides an insight into the extraordinary range of alliances and collaborations that now span the globe as the race to find a vaccine hots up.
And despite the latest warning from the head of the World Health Organisation that there might never be a “silver bullet”, there’s cautious hope that an unprecedented concentration of the top scientific minds on this single, overwhelming threat will deliver a means to help keep the viral invader at bay.
In the latter part of last year the CSIRO’s Australian Centre for Disease Preparedness, under its director Professor Trevor Drew, pitched a proposal to the internationally-funded Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), which had been set up in 2017 with the sole aim of accelerating vaccines against emerging infectious diseases.
Air India Express COVID-19 repatriation plane crashes in Kerala
New Delhi: At least 16 people were killed and dozens injured when an Air India Express passenger plane overshot the runway and broke into two after landing in the southern city of Calicut in heavy rain on Friday, officials said.
The Boeing-737 flight from Dubai was flying home Indians who had been stranded overseas due to the coronavirus pandemic. There were 190 passengers and crew on board, the civil aviation ministry said in a statement. Among them were 10 infants.
Television footage showed rescue workers moving around the wreckage in pouring rain.
The aircraft lay split into at least two chunks after the plane's fuselage sheared apart as it fell into a valley below, authorities said.
"Unfortunately, 16 people have lost their lives. I offer my condolences to their next of kin and pray for speedy recovery of the injured," Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said in a tweet.
Friday's crash is the worst passenger aircraft accident in the country since 2010, when an Air India Express flight, also from Dubai, overshot the runway and slid down a hill while landing in the southern Indian city of Mangalore, killing 158 people.
Reuters
Opinion: Get on top of the outbreaks and numbers will start to drop rapidly
By Catherine Bennett
Why isn’t the Health Department releasing its COVID-19 modelling? That was a question from the media gallery at Thursday’s daily press conference.
Allen Cheng, Deputy Chief Health Officer, explained that models always had uncertainty, and the outcomes of any given model could give a false impression of certainty.
We have also heard Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton talking about different modelling exercises, and alluding to a range of values for the effective reproductive number.
Models are built, and refined, so they best fit the existing case data.
The challenge here is that our parameters have been constantly changing along with the changing epidemiology of this outbreak, with different levels of restriction, the mandating of masks, and compliance with these Chief Health Officer orders.
Catherine Bennett is chair in epidemiology at Deakin University.
Economy to rely on households and government for years: RBA
By Jennifer Duke and Shane Wright
Household and government spending will have to drive the national economy for years, with the Reserve Bank warning of a long and bumpy recovery from a recession so severe it will crimp the number of Australians moving in together and having children.
Releasing downgraded forecasts that economists say show the economy will not be strong enough to withstand an interest rate rise until at least 2023, the bank said even before the stage four lockdown of Melbourne there were signs of deterioration in the outlook.
The RBA has responded to the pandemic by cutting official interest rates to a record low 0.25 per cent, extending a line of credit to banks to help support small and medium-sized businesses and buying more than $50 billion in government debt in a bid to protect the economy.
Security guards hired for hotel quarantine in an attempt at social inclusion
By Richard Baker and Noel Towell
A senior Department of Jobs official has been removed from their role as evidence mounts that the decision to use private security guards at Melbourne’s quarantine hotels was partly driven by a well-meaning attempt to provide jobs under "social inclusion" policies.
A leaked email from another public servant, the department's deputy secretary for inclusion, also paints a picture of how rushed the implementation was, describing "heroic efforts" over a weekend in late March as bureaucrats became "expert in the delivery of hotel concierge services".
The revelations will increase pressure on the Andrews government over whether it put too much emphasis on finding jobs for marginalised Victorians without ensuring that those guarding hotel guests were trained in infection control and supervised by authorised officers.
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2020-08-07 23:00:00Z
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