As it happened NSW records 753 new local COVID-19 cases and one death state hits 6 million jab target Victoria Queensland infections continue to grow
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Thank you for reading our live coverage of the dayâs events. If you are just joining us now, hereâs what you need to know:
NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian on Tuesday.Credit:Kate Geraghty
Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews.Credit:Getty
This is Michaela Whitbourn signing off on the live blog for tonight.
Latest postsThe number of exposure sites have continued to increase in Shepparton, in Victoriaâs north, as coronavirus continues to make its way through the community and surrounding suburbs.
Health authorities have listed several sites in Mooroopna, a suburb on the west side of Shepparton, at the Coles and Liquorland on August 20.
A Shepparton COVID-19 testing site at the racing club on August 23.Credit:Joe Armao
Those sites join several other sites in Shepparton listed by authorities, including The Butter Factory Cafe on August 21, the WB Hunter Mitre 10 on August 20 and Fairleys SUPA IGA on Numurkah Road, also on August 20.
The Health Department also warned that a case attended venue for all exposure sites in this most recent tranche published late on Tuesday.
âSome individuals will be Tier 1 contacts and required to quarantine for 14 days and the Department will contact them directly with this advice,â they said on their website.
Authorities also added sites at Aquamoves on August 18, KYO Sushi on August 20 and SkySalon Hairdressing on August 15 and 16, all in Shepparton and all tier-2 sites.
Victorian health authorities are also urging everyone in the state to keep a close eye on the growing list of exposure sites, which can be viewed here.
The Health Departmentâs exposure site list exceeded 700 late on Tuesday night as the department added tier 1 sites in Epping and Altona North, two more residential towers in Melbourneâs north and in West Melbourne, additional sites in the northern Victorian city of Shepparton, a new site at the Queen Victoria Market and a bus route.
The department also added new sites in Altona North, including a tier 1, near the community where much of the recent outbreak was seeded.
Woolworths Millers Junction at Altona North was listed as a tier 1 exposure site on August 18 from 2pm to 11.30pm, August 19 from 11.30am to 11.59pm and August 20 from midnight to 3.50pm.
Several new sites at Altona Gate shopping centre in Alton North were also added late on Tuesday, including Saccaâs Fine Food, The Butcher Club, Coles and the shopping centre itself, all tier-2, on August 21.
The Queen Victoria Market, pictured on August 12, was quiet as stateâs lockdown was extended. Credit:Scott McNaughton
The tier 1 site at Epping, Melbourne Market Warehouse 4.1, 55 was exposed on three separate days - August 20, 21 and 22 at different times. Anyone who was at this location during the times listed must get tested immediately and quarantine for 14 days from the exposure.
Authorities say the Queen Victoria Market was exposed by a positive case on August 22 from 1pm to 3pm. It is now listed as a tier-2 site.
An apartment building at 23 Blackwood Street, in North Melbourne, was exposed on August 17 and 18, making it the third new apartment complex listed on Tuesday and is considered a tier-2 site by authorities. Sites at the complex had been previously listed.
Another apartment building at 33 Jeffcott Street, West Melbourne, over six days from August 19 to 24 between midnight and 11.59pm. It is listed as a tier 2 site but some residents may be classified as tier 1 and will be contacted by the department
Several sites in Shepparton were also added as the outbreak makes it way through the community in northern Victoria.
A Coles was exposed early in the morning on August 22 and is now a tier-2 site. A Woolworths on the corner of High and Archer Streets was also exposed on August 20, alongside the SPC Factory Sales Shepparton, the Fernwood Fitness Shepparton, and the Westpac Bank in Shepparton, which are all tier-2.
Another Coles, at shopping centre Oakleigh Central in Melbourneâs south-east, was also exposed on August 20, and is now a tier-2 site.
Authorities also added a petrol station in Lara, which sits on the northern edge of Geelong and which is the site of a new outbreak where six people have tested positive in one house. The Shell service station on Forest Road was exposed on August 22 and is now a tier-2 site.
Another tier 2 site was added at Little River - a BP service station on August 19 between 5.45pm and 6.15pm
Authorities added a single site in Carlton, in Melbourneâs inner north, at an EzyMart on August 21 from 6am until 3.30pm.
Also listed as tier 2 sites were a Caltex Woolworths in Glen Waverley on August 23 from 5.45pm and 6.02pm; Green Apple Fruit and Veg in Roxburgh Park on August 21 from noon to 1pm and Mainview Oval, Truganina in August19 from 6pm to 7.35pm
A Woolworths in Lygon Court, Lygon Street was listed as a tier 2 site on August 21 from 11:30am to 12.22pm, but the department said some individuals would be tier 1 contacts and would need to get tested immediately and isolate for 14 days.
Several tier 2 sites were added after 10pm on Tuesday night, including a bus route and a train line; several locations at Tarneit Central Shopping Centre, more sites at Altona North, a KFC and 7-Eleven at Truganina, a Fort Knox Self Storage at Coburg North and a Hunky Dory fish and chip outlet in Oakleigh.
Victorian health authorities are also urging everyone in the state to keep a close eye on the growing list of sites, which can be viewed here.
Doherty Institute chief Sharon Lewin, whose groupâs modelling underpinned the four phase reopening plan agreed by national cabinet, has warned that there will be no single âfreedom dayâ even as vaccination numbers rise.
Professor Lewin said the modelling was based on a gradual easing of restrictions at 70 to 80 per cent vaccination rates but also included testing for COVID, tracing cases, and isolating those who fell ill.
âThe short answer is there is no freedom day here,â Professor Lewin said on ABCâs 7.30. But she added that âwe will have more freedoms, no doubt about thatâ as vaccination rates climb.
Professor Lewinâs caution comes after days of debate between premiers and Prime Minister Scott Morrison about what level of vaccination is necessary to ensure Australia can reopen without its health system being overwhelmed as cases rise, especially in NSW.
Her intervention is also an implicit rebuttal to suggestions, including from other epidemiologists, that Australia risked catastrophe by reopening with high vaccination but few or no other public health measures. That is not the assumption in the Doherty Institute modelling.
South Australia will introduce tough new travel restrictions requiring essential workers from high-risk states to have received at least one vaccination dose before entering.
Premier Steven Marshall said the new rules, which are being discussed with industry bodies, would apply to approved people who are allowed to leave quarantine for essential work.
âThere are often people who have high level technical skills who need to come into South Australia that canât do their 14 days quarantine,â Mr Marshall said at a press conference on Tuesday.
âWe have very strict conditions around these, we are just taking it to another level now.
âThese are small numbers but it is a risk we want to further mitigate against.â
The new rule would apply to essential workers coming from jurisdictions South Australia considers high risk, which currently include NSW, Victoria and ACT.
It would not apply to transport workers who are subject to nationally agreed testing requirements.
Itâs the heart-rending, tear-jerking, passion-swelling call to action that Australia has been waiting for. And curiously, it has come in the form of a Qantas ad.
The national carrier this week released a video advertisement that functions more readily as a pro-vaccination campaign ad, as it follows the story of three sets of travellers on their journey back into the world at large â" of course, after receiving their COVID-19 jabs. And itâs stirring stuff.
âIâm gonna see you soon, OK?â
Qantas, you had me there. Iâm welling up with tears just writing this. A bloke is on the phone, talking to someone in a far-off place, and he says the sentence we have all been dying to say for so long now.
Read the full article from Traveller here.
The Royal Melbourne Hospital will only accept the most acute ambulance patients as it winds down operations due to the furloughing of 450 staff who may have been exposed to COVID-19.
A cluster at the hospital grew by four cases on Tuesday, and the hospital confirmed on Tuesday afternoon ambulances had been instructed to avoid the hospital in most cases.
Hundreds of staff have been furloughed amid an outbreak at Royal Melbourne Hospital. Credit:Pat Scala
âAs we continue to work through our outbreak (announced Saturday 21 August), the emergency department continues to accept walk-ins but remains on ambulance bypass,â a statement from the hospital said.
âWe continue to be open for trauma and all urgent care arriving via ambulance, our outpatient clinics are operating as usual and we are still conducting emergency and category 1 surgeries.
âWe would like to once again thank our colleagues across the health system for their continued support during the challenging time. All wards, except for one, are fully operational. We hope to have all services operating at near full capacity by Wednesday 25 August 2021.â
Federal Labor MPs on an influential Parliamentary committee have made a rare break from ranks to call for the lobbyist register and code of conduct to be enshrined in legislation.
In a report tabled on Tuesday, the six Labor members of the public accounts and audit committee say there appears to be a âserious and fundamental weaknessâ in the fact that âthe government has been operating an essentially passive regimeâ.
Labor MP Julian Hill supports enshrining the code of conduct in legislation.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
The Auditor-General examined the lobbying code of conduct in 2018 and again in 2020. Between those two audits, responsibility for it was transferred from the Prime Ministerâs Department to the Attorney-Generalâs.
You can read more about what the lobbying code of conduct is and who can be a lobbyist here.
The second audit found little or no progress had been made by the Attorney-Generalâs department in fixing up the problems identified two years earlier. The department told the committee it now had a plan to get on with all these things.
The committee has asked the Attorney-Generalâs Department to give an update within six months on its work to implement the audit recommendations, including how itâs telling people about the lobbyist code of conduct and its progress on developing a framework to judge the codeâs success.
Liberal MP Lucy Wicks, the committeeâs chair, said this would give an extra level of oversight to make sure the improvements were made.
But Labor MP Julian Hill, the committeeâs deputy chair, told Parliament the whole thing should be enshrined in legislation to give it a stronger basis.
âThis would be a small but tangible step towards helping to restore public trust,â he said.
âA legislative basis for the lobbying code would improve compliance and indeed could provide penalties for serious or deliberate breaches of the code. Currently, there are no penalties, itâs just an, âoh well, sheâll be rightâ approach.â
Ms Wicks said the committeeâs discussions about the best approach had included that âthere wasnât sufficient evidence taken during the inquiry to include any further recommendations or views in relation to [legislating] in this reportâ.
Mr Hill noted it was only the second time in his five years on the committee that opposition MPs had made additional comments on a report.
COVID-19 cases in NSW will continue to climb unless the reproductive rate of the outbreak decreases, as the Chief Health Officer warns the state is âhere for the long haulâ.
There were 753 new local cases reported in the state on Tuesday, a drop on numbers over 800 in recent days although the five-day moving average still increased.
NSW Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant at Tuesdayâs COVID-19 update.Credit:Kate Geraghty
âIâd love to believe that we are on the trend down ... but one day is not a trend,â Dr Kerry Chant told reporters.
In an infectious diseases outbreak, the reproduction rate is the average number of people each infected person goes on to infect. So at a reproduction number of 1.3, every 10 people who test positive to COVID-19 will collectively infect another 13 people.
An effective reproduction number (or âR effâ) is a more sophisticated form of this number based on modelling, which may include factors such as population immunity, hospitalisations and social distancing. For this reason, the R eff of an outbreak can vary slightly based on who is running the numbers.
On Tuesday, Premier Gladys Berejiklian said the R eff in NSWâs outbreak was 1.3.
âWe want to see it decreased below one,â she said, noting that âin many places in the world it is between seven and nineâ.
The most recent R eff figures published on NSWâs outbreak were 1.06 by the state ministryâs Agency for Clinical Innovation last Wednesday and 1.17 from the federal department on August 15.
Read the full article here.
As Greater Sydney including the Blue Mountains weathers its ninth week in lockdown, heavy rain, winds and even snow has made outdoor exercise challenging. The Sydney Morning Heraldâs photographer Wolter Peeters snapped these distinctly wintry shots in Blackheath.
Snow falls in Blackheath as a deepening low-pressure system moves offshore. Credit:Wolter Peeters
More snow in Blackheath.Credit:Wolter Peeters
Braving the cold: snow falls in Blackheath.Credit:Wolter Peeters
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