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Four new cases in Victoria
Victoria has recorded four new cases and no deaths from coronavirus in the last 24 hours.
'Not on': Melbourne businesses must take responsibility
Victorian Chamber of Commerce chief Paul Guerra has implored business owners to do the right thing as Melbourne adjusts to looser coronavirus restrictions.
And he urged customers to exercise their rights to shop elsewhere when they saw businesses doing the wrong thing like not taking contact details.
"It's not on. It's just not on note on every business owner needs to be doing the right thing and, as I said before, don't put yourself in a risky position if they haven't taken your details. Why would you stay?," he told 3AW radio.
Mr Guerra said major business associations met with the state government on Thursday to discuss enforcement including the prospect of a statewide advertising campaign.
"Each one of us plays a part in that as well so if we're seeing business owner and not doing the right thing, talk to the manager on the day and if you don't get the response you need ring the COVID hotline," he said.
"The business owners need to take responsibility but if we want them to stay open, we've got to make sure they're doing the right things, the best way to do that if they don't have the right practice in place tell them if they still don't put them in place, go somewhere else."
On the question of QR apps, Mr Guerra said there were a number of solutions available but it would be preferable if the state was using a single option.
Bit of a trick to this year's treats
So it's Halloween on Saturday and, of course, it's all a bit different for much of the country but most particularly in Victoria.
In the southern state the government has issued quite detailed guidelines for those looking to still get in the spirit and not ghost the occasion completely.
In my house the kids will be going room to room to trick or treat and the eldest daughter is on the lobby hard for a treasure hunt.
We'd like to hear from readers on how you're planning to mark the day.
'We can't stay stuck in neutral': PM urges Queensland, WA reopening
By Mary Ward
Prime Minister Scott Morrison has urged Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk to reopen to all of NSW when she makes a statement about the state border today.
Queensland has previously said it would wait for 28 days of no coronavirus community transmission before allowing NSW residents outside of its "border zone" to enter the state.
However, the Queensland Premier has said she will be making an announcement about the border today.
Asked about what he wanted to see from the announcement, the Prime Minister told Ben Fordham on 2GB he wanted Ms Palaszczuk to "make decisions on the basis of health advice and be transparent about it".
"It's just very often hard to get a steer on what's behind these decisions," he said of states who had kept hard borders.
With the Queensland announcement as well as a meeting of Western Australian state disaster council set to discuss its own border closure today, Mr Morrison said he "welcomed" the reopening of state borders.
"The testing and tracing systems – that's what enables Australia to go forward, we've looked at the Queensland systems and the Queensland systems are good," he said, adding: "We can't stay stuck in neutral."
Mr Morrison did not comment specifically on the closed border between NSW and Victoria.
Mental health impacts of lockdown examined
The mental health impact of the coronavirus and lockdowns is undeniable. There is some quality reporting on this issue this morning including the findings of an Ipsos poll, commissioned by The Age and Nine News, that found COVID-19 had disproportionately affected young people’s mental health, with three-quarters of those aged 18 to 24 saying it had been impacted.
This decreased with age: 65 per cent of those aged 25-39 said the pandemic and lockdown had impacted on their mental health, 49 per cent of those aged 40-54, and 35 per cent of those aged 55 and over.
The author of that story Jewel Topsfield spoke with Max Hayward, a 22-year-old university student, was supposed to be on exchange in the US this semester. Instead, he found himself stuck in his room in a Melbourne residential college.
“I’m studying agricultural science and a big part of my education is being out in the field and on farms. It’s been really tough to replace that with just Zooms all the time. This year has basically been a write-off for me – it feels in a big way like I have lost my purpose.
“I wouldn’t say I became depressed but I started spending a lot more time in bed. Although I am connected with friends online, I started withdrawing from them, not calling them as much, not messaging them as much and turning the camera off for Zooms.”
You can read the full story here.
Is the rest of the world getting further away
Professor Michael Toole, an epidemiologist at the Burnet Institute, has written a good opinion piece for us this morning.
He looks at the wildly contrasting performances of different countries, and how they got to where they are, to ponder whether we will be able to travel overseas any time soon.
Here's a taste of what he has to say:
For Australia, the lesson of what’s happening in Europe - and of Victoria’s second wave - is that we are just one bad decision, one slice of bad luck, away from a new COVID-19 bushfire.
We must not be complacent or self-congratulatory. Leadership, science and unity got us and our Asia-Pacific neighbours to this place. And it’s these things that stand between a "zero COVID" life and the devastation of a new wave.
A one-way travel bubble is in place with New Zealand and that could be cautiously extended two-way to other Pacific and Asian countries with low transmission like Vanuatu, Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore and Hong Kong.
Until there is an effective and widely adopted vaccine, or highly effective prophylactic and/or therapeutic drugs to be used most likely with point-of-care diagnostic tests, we probably can’t count on travel beyond the Asia-Pacific region.
Until there is an effective and widely adopted vaccine, or highly effective prophylactic and/or therapeutic drugs to be used most likely with point-of-care diagnostic tests, we probably can’t count on travel beyond the Asia-Pacific region.
There is hope on the vaccine front, given the massive scientific and financial investment. However, even if an effective vaccine becomes available in the short term, there are major logistical challenges to its distribution widely and equitably.
For example, the Pfizer candidate vaccine needs to be stored at minus 80 degrees and requires two doses. Even in a resource-rich country like Australia, that will pose huge challenges. It may prove to be a major impediment in many low- and middle-income countries.
You can read the full piece here.
Follow our US election coverage live
The American election is less than a week away.
We are running live coverage of the campaign every day in the lead up and will be blogging throughout the wee hours on election day.
My colleage Roy Ward (who many people that follow this blog would know) is helming our live coverage today.
You can check it out over here.
Queensland flags hospitality, border trade-off
By Matt Dennien and Lydia Lynch
Queensland's hospitality sector has been told not to expect a further reprieve on restrictions ahead of a long-awaited decision, set for Friday, for the next steps towards reopening of the New South Wales bubble.
A decision on a full reopening to NSW was flagged in an update roadmap in earlier October, provided the state had been free of so-called mystery COVID-19 cases for 28 days, after the border closed for a second time two months earlier.
The October announcement also featured a winding back of restrictions on gathering sizes, seating requirements in venues and dancing at venues.
Asked whether more could be on the cards, Deputy Premier Stephen Miles said they had already been "substantially eased".
"There is a trade off between border restrictions and domestic, local restrictions," Mr Miles said. "At this stage, there's no intention to ease those any further.
"Our hospitality sector is running as close to normal as anywhere else in the world, in fact better than anywhere else in the world, and that is because we don't currently have cases.
"If we were to rush to allow more people to come in, that would create a risk of cases and if we didn't have some restrictions in place – social distancing restrictions in place – the risk of those cases turning into major outbreaks is much greater."
Berejiklian pushes QR app downloads
By Alexandra Smith and Tom Rabe
NSW is aggressively pursuing the expansion of its digital contact tracing tool, with Premier Gladys Berejiklian warning that Victoria's slow take-up of QR code technology would delay the opening of the border.
The NSW government's Service NSW app – which works with the government-developed QR code – is being used by more than half a million people, but the government is determined to reach 3 million people, or two-thirds of all adults in the state, by the time JobKeeper expires at the end of March.
Despite companies including Bunnings, Officeworks and hospitality giant Merivale using the government's QR code, as well as many private versions, NSW has not ruled out mandating its use.
As Victoria scrambles to develop its own QR check-in code to help health authorities contact trace COVID-19 cases, Ms Berejiklian said she would not ease border restrictions for at least two weeks.
Ms Berejiklian said she was not willing to gamble NSW and the nation’s economy by opening the border with Victoria before the Andrews government proves it can operate without a lockdown.
"I don’t want to see the border up a day longer than it needs to be, but we also need to be sensible, we need to see Victoria demonstrate they have the capacity to get on top of any outbreaks, because there will be," Ms Berejiklian said.
Read the full article here
'Wrong direction': Fauci sounds warning
Washington: The White House coronavirus taskforce is warning of a persistent and broad spread of COVID-19 in the western half of the United States and its members have urged aggressive mitigation measures to curb infections.
The area includes a number of battleground states that will play an important role in Tuesday's US presidential election as Republican President Donald Trump seeks a second term against Democratic challenger Joe Biden.
"We are on a very difficult trajectory. We're going in the wrong direction," said Dr Anthony Fauci, taskforce member and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
Fauci noted that coronavirus cases are rising in 47 states and patients are overwhelming hospitals across the country.
"If things do not change, if they continue on the course we're on, there's gonna be a whole lot of pain in this country with regard to additional cases and hospitalisations, and deaths," Fauci said in an interview with CNBC.
Read the full story here.
Reuters
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2020-10-29 21:08:00Z
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