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NSW’s fully vaccinated freedoms will be safe and ‘practical’, Deputy Premier says
By Broede Carmody
NSW Deputy Premier John Barilaro was also on Sunrise this morning.
He was asked whether it’s a done deal if people in NSW will soon be able to visit the hairdresser now that 6 million coronavirus jabs have gone into arms.
Here’s what the state Nationals leader had to say:
As the minister responsible for the roadmap [out of lockdown], it may be more. It may be only the one [rule that eases].
There are actually a number of options in front of the crisis committee that we will consider. We’ve had some advice from the chief psychiatrist about what makes people feel better, what are those freedoms that you can give someone that allows them to feel confident ... and maybe give them a bit of hope that we’re getting to the end of it.
There’s a few options. We’ll make a decision [soon] about which ones are practical and ones that don’t risk a further spread. We’re almost there. We’ll announce something shortly.
No ‘sanctions’ but states need to stick to reopening plan: Treasurer
By Broede Carmody
Federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg is doing the media rounds this morning.
He was speaking on Seven’s breakfast program Sunrise just moments ago. As regular readers of this will know, much has been made this week of Australia’s vaccine targets and subsequent plan to reopen internally and to the world.
The Prime Minister says Australia needs to emerge from its lockdown “cave” for the good of the economy and people’s mental health once 70 to 80 per cent of people are vaccinated against COVID-19. The idea is to eventually treat coronavirus like the flu.
However, some premiers have flagged keeping hard borders in place even after their jurisdictions have high vaccination rates.
The Treasurer told Sunrise he is confident that state and territory leaders will stick to the national plan once they realise the extent of public support. (As we reported earlier, the majority of voters back national cabinet’s plan to ease coronavirus restrictions off the back of high vaccination rates.)
Here’s what Mr Frydenberg had to say when asked what the Morrison government would do if all state and territory leaders don’t honour their national cabinet agreements:
I wouldn’t use that term sanctions but what I would say is that I’ve made it very clear that there should be no expectation on behalf of the premiers and the chief ministers that our emergency economic support will continue at the scale that it is currently when we reach the 70 to 80 per cent targets.
That’s the plan they have agreed to. The Commonwealth right now is picking up the whole tab for the income support, through $750 payments every week for people who have lost hours of work. That’s already $4 billion out the door since July, and we are also picking up the tab with the states’ 50-50 on business support.
We are doing a lot of heavy lifting in terms of economic support, but it’s with a purpose. A purpose to suppress the virus together with those targets and then to open up as we have committed to the Australian people.
More than 750 exposure sites in Victoria
By Mathew Dunckley
More than 20 exposure sites were added to Victoria’s official list late last night, taking the overall tally to more than 750.
The sites are focused around Melbourne’s north and west but also feature a takeaway food outlet in the south east and CBD supermarket.
The latest tier-1 locations include Woolworths Millers Junction, in Altona North, for:
- Wednesday, August 18 from 2pm to 11.30pm;
- Thursday, August 19 from 11.30am to 11.59pm; and
- Friday, August 20 from midnight to 3.50pm.
In Victoria, tier 1 means anyone who attended at the times listed must immediately get a coronavirus test and isolate for 14 days from the date of exposure (regardless of the result).
Numerous tier-2 sites were also added late last night, including buses running from North Melbourne to the Royal Melbourne Hospital, a KFC, 7-Eleven and Aldi.
Biden rebuffs allies, will withdraw troops from Kabul end of August
By Matthew Knott
US President Joe Biden plans to stick to his self-imposed August 31 departure deadline from Afghanistan, rejecting demands from some of America’s closest allies to delay the withdrawal of US troops.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who called an emergency meeting of the G7 nations to discuss the issue, led the push for Biden to extend the military mission to ensure as many people as possible can be evacuated from the Taliban-controlled country.
Biden has also faced calls from veterans groups and congressional Democrats to push back the withdrawal date. But the Taliban has threatened to retaliate in some form if the US stays in Afghanistan past the end of the month.
Major western Sydney hospital forced into ‘emergency’ operations
By Mary Ward
A major hospital at the epicentre of Sydney’s outbreak has been forced into “emergency operations”, reducing the number of COVID-19 cases arriving by ambulance for 24 hours and transferring several critical patients to other hospitals.
On Tuesday, Westmead Hospital announced to staff it was doing so to “support an internal disaster management response” as it deals with an increasing number of coronavirus infections.
“We acknowledge that we are no longer operating in a business-as-usual environment and careful assessment and response is required to manage future demand for our services,” the hospital’s acting general manager, Jenelle Matic, said in an email seen by this masthead.
Western Sydney Local Health District chief executive Graeme Loy said the measures were implemented following “unprecedented high demand” for the hospital’s services during the COVID-19 outbreak.
“We are continuing to receive ambulances and emergency care continues to be available to everyone who needs it,” he said.
It came after ambulances queued for hours outside the hospital’s emergency department on Monday night. At times, paramedics said there were nine ambulances in the queue, including one which waited over six hours.
Greens NSW health spokesperson Cate Faehrmann said it was concerning western Sydney’s largest hospital was unable to cope with its caseload.
“We might not be anywhere near the peak of this outbreak, yet already the caseload is too much for Westmead to bear on its own,” said Ms Faehrmann, who has written to Health Minister Brad Hazzard calling for better resourcing of hospitals and ICUs.
Voters back national vaccination targets to ease restrictions
By David Crowe
Most Australians want political leaders to stick to a national cabinet deal to ease restrictions when the vaccination rate hits key targets, with 62 per cent backing the plan and only 24 per cent saying states and territories should go their own way.
Voters are increasing their support for vaccinations at the same time many of them decide the country will not return to zero coronavirus cases, with 54 per cent saying it is not possible to achieve “complete suppression” again.
The exclusive findings lend weight to Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s call to the country to “get out of the cave” after weeks of dispute over whether to relax rules when the vaccine rate reaches 70 per cent and then 80 per cent of people aged 16 and over.
Read more about the latest Resolve Political Monitor here.
Rush to cancel AstraZeneca bookings as Pfizer access widened in Victoria
By Paul Sakkal and Michael Fowler
The Andrews government’s move to make the Pfizer vaccine available to Victorians aged 16 to 39 from Wednesday prompted widespread cancellation of AstraZeneca appointments at GP clinics and created lengthy delays on the state’s booking website on Tuesday.
Until today, people between 18 and 39 were able to get the AstraZeneca vaccine in Victoria, but Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s announcement last week making Pfizer available for people aged over 16 from August 31 meant people with AstraZeneca bookings had suddenly cancelled or were not showing up.
Premier Daniel Andrews said on Tuesday that the Commonwealth’s surprise move had in part forced his hand. Though he has spruiked the efficacy and safety of AstraZeneca more than most state premiers, he said people who had booked for their first dose of AstraZeneca at state hubs would now have the option of receiving Pfizer instead.
From 7am on Wednesday, 830,000 more first-dose vaccine appointments will be available, more than half of which will be Pfizer. AstraZeneca – manufactured in Melbourne and stockpiled in its millions – will still be available to people aged 18 and over, but those aged 16 and 17 will receive only Pfizer.
Read the full story here.
This morning’s headlines at a glance
By Broede Carmody
Good morning and thanks for your company.
It’s Wednesday, August 25. 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.
- NSW has surpassed Premier Gladys Berejiklian’s initial target of 6 million coronavirus jabs. This equates to about 60.3 per cent of the state’s adult population. Yesterday, NSW recorded 753 new cases of coronavirus – down from 818 on Monday. NSW Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant says while she hopes numbers are going down, it’s too early to see a trend. A mother in her 30s is among the latest people to die with the virus and there is growing pressure on the state’s hospitals.
- Victoria is expanding its Pfizer eligibility from 7am this morning. Around 800,000 vaccine bookings will be made available today, and more than half of those are Pfizer jabs aimed at 16- to 39-year-olds. Victoria recorded 50 locally acquired cases yesterday, the majority of those infectious in the community.
- The ACT recorded 30 new cases yesterday. This is the territory’s highest daily number of the current outbreak. It comes amid long queues at Canberra testing sites and pressure on food delivery services. There are more than 100 exposure sites.
- There were two local cases recorded in Queensland on Tuesday. Both are interstate truck drivers. However, authorities say the pair pose a low risk to the Sunshine State. This is because they initially tested positive but later returned negative tests. Further investigations are underway.
- And in federal politics, the majority of Australians would like to see political leaders stick to a national cabinet plan to ease restrictions when the nation hits key vaccination targets. Just 24 per cent of people would like their state or territory leader to go their own way (for example, keeping border closures in place).
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2021-08-24 21:42:27Z
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