While the final Melbourne public housing tower has been released from strict coronavirus quarantine, tenant Dima Abdu says residents will continue playing it safe and mainly remain in their units.
Key points:
- About one-third of the tower's residents have either contracted COVID-19 or are the close contacts of a positive case
- Contact tracing teams are still investigating cases across the public housing estates
- In the fortnight since the public housing lockdown began, tougher restrictions have been imposed on Melbourne
A fortnight after they were placed under "hard lockdown" alongside eight other public housing estates, residents of 33 Alfred Street, North Melbourne returned to the same restrictions as the rest of the city overnight.
The nine towers were shut down due to a concerning rise in COVID-19 infections, which had health officials concerned about the "explosive potential" for the virus to spread in the blocks.
Eight of the estates returned to stage three stay-at-home orders on July 9, but a worrying number of cases at Alfred Street saw the restrictions there extended.
Residents have only been allowed to leave for medical or compassionate reasons or for police-monitored exercise.
"There's a sense of relief," said Ms Abdu, a biomedical science student.
Now, those who have returned a negative coronavirus test can leave for the same four reasons as the rest of metropolitan Melbourne: shopping for essential supplies, exercise, medical care or caregiving and work or education where it cannot be done from home.
"I think that people who really need to get out will be getting out, so people who need to see specialist doctors, people who need to go to their appointments, get their medication," Ms Abdu said.
But Ms Abdu said from her conversations, most people would just "play it safe and stay in".
At least 100 Alfred Street residents, or about a third of those living in the tower, have either contracted COVID-19 or are the close contacts of a positive case.
"We will continue to provide groceries, perishable food, cooked meals — we will continue to provide all the basics that those residents need," Premier Daniel Andrews said on Saturday.
Those people will not be allowed to leave their units except for a small number of urgent exemptions, or to be moved to hotel quarantine.
The same rules apply to positive cases and their close contacts across Victoria.
Victoria's dramatic changes during 14 days of lockdown
When the lockdown was first imposed on the nine towers, only 12 suburbs were under stage three stay-at-home orders.
Now, the entirety of metropolitan Melbourne and the Mitchell Shire is covered by the restrictions.
And the number of coronavirus cases in Victoria has jumped dramatically in the past fortnight, rising from 2,469 on the first day of the tower lockdown to 5,353 yesterday.
The rate of community transmission has soared as the state has recorded day after day of record-high coronavirus numbers.
By Saturday, there had been 286 cases of coronavirus detected across the nine Flemington and North Melbourne towers.
"Investigations are continuing into how these cases are linked," the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) said on Saturday.
Investigations are also continuing into a rise in cases connected to similar public housing towers in Carlton, on the other side of Melbourne's CBD, which are now linked to 48 infections.
The Victorian ombudsman has launched an investigation into the tower lockdowns, looking at the conditions of the detention order, the communication with residents and the appropriateness of the restrictions.
Ms Abdu said while most residents had no issues with the hard lockdown itself, it seemed to her "communication, respect as a community was not there".
"But I think everyone's going to use this to reflect and possibly fill in the gaps," she said.
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2020-07-18 21:44:00Z
CBMiZGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFiYy5uZXQuYXUvbmV3cy8yMDIwLTA3LTE5L2Nvcm9uYXZpcnVzLWNhc2VzLWluLW1lbGJvdXJuZS1wdWJsaWMtaG91c2luZy10b3dlcnMvMTI0NzAwMjjSASdodHRwczovL2FtcC5hYmMubmV0LmF1L2FydGljbGUvMTI0NzAwMjg
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