Friday, October 30, 2020

Life In Coronavirus Lockdown: Reopening

Australia COVID-19 cases February - October 2020
COVID-19 cases in Australia (source: The Age)

It has been a long road for metropolitan Melbourne, but after 111 days we finally emerged from our lockdown at 11:59 pm on Tuesday, 27 October. It took an extra week to get here due to an outbreak in the northern suburbs, but the good news is that it is contained and we are under the 14 day average threshold of five new cases and five mystery cases per day. Melbourne is now on the Third Step of the roadmap, which means there are no restrictions on reasons to leave home, retail and hospitality have reopened (with distancing rules in place), and you can meet with friends and family either in groups of 10 outdoors or with up to two people from the same household inside your home once a day. 
 
The city is coming back to life and there was genuine relief and excitement when the announcement was made on Monday by Premier Dan Andrews (wearing his weekend North Face jacket). If all continues to go well over the next week we should see a further easing of restrictions in metro Melbourne on 8 November, including the elimination of the 25km travel radius and 'ring of steel' border with regional Victoria, which will bring the state back together again.
 
As of today there have been 27,581 cases and 907 deaths due to COVID-19 in Australia. The big political issue of the moment is borders between states and trying to get those open before Christmas. All the other states and territories minus Victoria and New South Wales have no cases and are finally opening up to each other. The question is when will we get to join them? Then there is the prospect of international travel bubbles with countries in the Asia Pacific, with New Zealanders being the first to travel to Australia and not have to quarantine on arrival.
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