Residents in regional NSW urged to stay home
Residents in regional NSW are being urged to follow health orders and stay home as police ramp up compliance operations.
“The communities of regional NSW have been doing a great job to keep the virus out of their areas, and we need to keep up that good work; now is not the time for complacency,” Regional NSW Field Operations Deputy Commissioner Mick Willing said.
“It’s more important than ever that we fully comply with the Public Health Orders – and report breaches, especially relating to visitors from any of the areas subject to stay-at-home orders.
“In recent days, NSW Health identified high levels of virus fragments were detected in sewerage in a number of major regional centres, including Armidale, Coffs Harbour, Dubbo, and Mudgee.
“These alerts are of concern, as we know in Armidale, positive cases have since been confirmed.”
The NSW town of Armidale is officially in its first night of lockdown after the virus arrived in the Northern Tableland towns after a six-hour journey on a regional NSW train.
More than 25,000 residents from the Armidale local government area, including the neighbouring township of Guyra, are affected by the stay-at-home orders which took effect at 5pm on Saturday.
Lockdown ‘pressure point’: How school children are responding to rising anxiety levels
By Jenny Noyes
Remote learning may now be a familiar routine, but between rising case numbers, a lockdown that drags on, looming exams, misinformation and more young people getting sick, schools are battling a heightened mental health toll this year.
“There’s a lot more anxiety this time around”, says Maria Boyle, NSW Education’s principal psychologist. She says more students are directly impacted by COVID-19 in the current outbreak than during previous lockdowns, and there are more vulnerable families – such as those with refugee and non-English speaking backgrounds – in the hard lockdown zones.
Ms Boyle says year 12 students are particularly affected by the length and timing of the current lockdown and the uncertainty it brings to the rest of the year – comments echoed by several principals, and students themselves.
The education department has boosted its on-call staff to talk directly with struggling students, and has developed information guides for parents in various languages with advice and contacts to help address concerns or anxiety as students learn from home. And schools are developing their own initiatives to take the pressure off students, teachers and families, and boost morale.
Jackson Dowling, year 12 student and school captain at Narrabeen Sports High School, says being locked down for weeks without a firm end date in term three is “very, very difficult compared to what we normally would have been doing”.
US now averaging 100,000 new COVID-19 infections a day
The US is now averaging 100,000 new COVID-19 infections a day, returning to a milestone last seen during the winter surge in another bleak reminder of how quickly the delta variant has spread through the country.
Health officials fear that cases, hospitalisations and deaths will continue to soar if more Americans don’t embrace the COVID-19 vaccine. Nationwide, 50% of residents are fully vaccinated and more than 70% of adults have received at least one dose.
“Our models show that if we don’t (vaccinate people), we could be up to several hundred thousand cases a day, similar to our surge in early January,” Centres for Disease Control and Prevention director Rochelle Walensky said on CNN this week.
Photographs from Sydney’s west document lockdown experience
The Herald’s photographers have spent time in Sydney’s west, documenting peoples’ lockdown experiences. Here are some of their incredible photographs. See more of their work here.
New exposure sites added in Victoria late last night
By David Estcourt
In case you missed it, health authorities added four new exposure sites in Victoria late on Saturday night as the state braces for the extent of the spread linked to chains of transmission with unknown origins.
A tier-1 exposure site has been declared at a North East Link Project Worksite on Drysdale Street in Yallambie, in Melbourne’s northeast. Health authorities are instructing people who visited the site on August 2, 3 and 4 to isolate immediately and quarantine for 14 days.
Another tier-1 exposure site was added related to a shopping centre in Melbourne’s west, this time at dental clinic Pacific Smiles Dental.
A case visited the clinic, which is located in CS Square, a shopping centre in Caroline Springs, on August 4.
‘It is really heartbreaking’: Snap lockdown adds to Hunter hardship
By Andrew Taylor
Hunter Valley wineries already hit hard by Sydney’s stay-at-home orders have lost hundreds more bookings as a result of the seven-day snap lockdown of Newcastle and surrounding regions, with businesses being put into hibernation and staff stood down.
Eight local government areas, including councils covering the Hunter Valley wine country, were plunged into lockdown on Thursday after several new cases were recorded.
Peterson House winery in Pokolbin will lose 128 bookings for more than 600 diners in its restaurant because of the snap lockdown as well as five weddings and bookings for 169 guests at its cellar door.
Marketing manager Haylee Jonovski said there had already been a substantial downturn in business because of the Greater Sydney lockdown, with more than 30 weddings and events postponed.
“Ninety per cent of our clients are from Sydney which has affected new bookings as guests are unable to come out and see the venue,” she said.
Construction workers from Sydney COVID hotspots can return to work if vaccinated
By Carrie Fellner and Tom Rabe
Construction workers will be able to return to unoccupied work sites across NSW from Wednesday on the condition the sites remain at half capacity and workers from COVID-19 hotspots are vaccinated.
Deputy Premier John Barilaro has announced construction workers from Sydney’s eight worst-hit local government areas will be able to pick up the tools from Wednesday, for the first time since a snap ban took effect on July 17.
However a strict vaccination and testing regime will be in place for the workers from the affected local government areas: Blacktown, Campbelltown, Canterbury-Bankstown, Cumberland, Fairfield, Georges River, Liverpool and Parramatta.
“We want workers back on the tools, but we need to continue to keep this virus at bay, and so by opening unoccupied work sites at 50 per cent capacity and vaccinating workers from within those affected LGAs, we can achieve both,” Mr Barilaro said on Saturday.
It comes as The Sun-Herald can reveal close to $8 billion worth of major infrastructure projects - including the new airport and Southwest Metro - have been on ice within Sydney’s coronavirus red zones.
Victorian lockdown likely to be extended as cluster sources remain unknown
By Paul Sakkal and Aisha Dow
Victorian government sources and epidemiologists say the state’s lockdown will almost certainly last for more than seven days because it could take weeks for all people to be in isolation for their infectious period.
Premier Daniel Andrews said Saturday’s 29 recorded cases, the highest daily total since September, made for a “concerning day”. Two senior Victorian government sources, speaking anonymously to make predictions about the outbreak, said it could take weeks for a ring to be put around the clusters.
However, the Premier insisted it was achievable to drive local cases to zero despite the new outbreak penetrating western suburbs communities with greater language barriers, bigger family groups and an increased proportion of essential workers who can’t work from home.
Prominent epidemiologists Nancy Baxter and Catherine Bennett predicted an extended lockdown, with both concerned the new clusters, one centred in Hobsons Bay and the other linked to the city of Maribyrnong, either emerged from chains of transmission that have been running for weeks in Victoria or new NSW incursions.
NSW Health adds more venues of concern
By Laura Chung
NSW Health sent out further venues of concern last night including a chemist, a university housing complex and a service station.
If you attended the following venues during the times listed, you are a close contact and must get tested and isolate for 14 days since you were there, regardless of the result.
Callaghan: International House (any block), Callaghan Campus, University of Newcastle, University Drive, July 28, 29, 30, 31 and August 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7.
Penrith: Terry White Pharmacy Penrith, 447 High Street, August 3 from 7.50am to 6pm and August 4 from 7.50am to 6pm.
St Marys: St Marys Medical Centre, 53 Phillip Street, August 4 from 9.15am to 10am.
Penrith: JANS Family Health Practice, 447 High Street, August 3 from 7.50am to 6pm and August 4 from 7.50 to 6pm.
Marylands: Ampol Service Station, 41 Minmi Road, August 6 from 4.30am to 10am.
Charlestown: Nextra Newsagency, Charlestown Square, Pearson Street, July 29 from 3.15pm to 3.22pm and 4.18pm and 4.24pm.
Kotara: Barber Industries, Westfield Kotara, 75-89 Park Avenue, August 5 from 1.30pm to 2pm.
In addition, NSW Health has been notified of a number of new casual contact venues of concern associated with confirmed cases of COVID 19. To view these new venues, please visit the NSW Government website.
Anyone who visited one of these venues at the times listed is a casual contact and must immediately get tested and isolate until a negative result is received.
Good morning
By Laura Chung
Good morning and welcome to our coronavirus blog. I am Laura Chung.
Here are the key pieces of news that happened yesterday:
NSW reported 319 new local cases on Saturday - another record for the state. Health Minister Brad Hazzard announced up to 4000 authorised supermarket and food distribution workers can roll up their sleeves for a vaccine on Sunday at Sydney Olympic Park. Later, Deputy Premier John Barilaro said construction workers will be able to return to unoccupied worksites across NSW from Wednesday on the condition they remain at half capacity and workers from COVID hotspots are vaccinated. Another five people died from COVID-19 in the state, including 80-year-old Bossley grandfather Kat Ditthavong.
Victoria recorded 29 new cases of coronavirus, and it looks likely the state’s sixth lockdown will last more than seven days. Andrews government sources and epidemiologists say it could take weeks for all infected people to be isolated. Health authorities identified at least 67 new exposure sites across the state - many of them tier 1.
In the NSW regions, Armidale was plunged into lockdown at 5pm. It appears the virus may have hitched a ride there on a train, with authorities issuing a close contact alert for people who caught an XPT service from Newcastle to Armidale on Thursday, July 29. Four new cases of COVID were confirmed in young people in Newcastle, taking the total number of cases in the Hunter-New England area to 13 since Thursday.
- Queensland recorded 13 new cases. The state’s Delta outbreak is being supercharged by children, with at least 10 Brisbane schools or their facilities appearing as COVID-19 exposure sites.
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2021-08-07 22:20:44Z
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