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As COVID returns to Flemington’s public housing estate, the response is markedly different - The Age

It was grey, drizzly and cold on the Flemington public housing estate on Saturday – a day very similar to July 4 last year when a COVID-19 outbreak in the towers led to an instant hard lockdown.

Then, police swarmed in their hundreds in what Ombudsman Deborah Glass later described as a “theatre of policing” that traumatised residents and breached their human rights. The estate was bathed with flashing blue lights as residents found themselves imprisoned in their homes without warning, in what remains the most severe coronavirus outbreak response implemented in Australia.

A year after its residents were locked in their homes due to a COVID outbreak, the virus has returned to Flemington’s public housing estate - but the response by authorities this time has been markedly different.

A year after its residents were locked in their homes due to a COVID outbreak, the virus has returned to Flemington’s public housing estate - but the response by authorities this time has been markedly different.Credit:Luis Ascui

On Friday, coronavirus came once again to the estate with the diagnosis of a COVID-19 case, followed by family members also testing positive.

A group of young women sat on the stairs at the back of the tower on Saturday afternoon, trying to avoid attention from the officials and media surrounding the building. “Are the police coming?” they asked. “Is it all happening again?”

But the response this time is different. Although the state government has rejected the Ombudsman’s recommendation that it apologise to the community for last year’s lockdown implementation, there is a tacit understanding that nothing like it should ever happen again.

One of the towers, 130 Racecourse Road, is an exposure site, with eight cases identified so far. One floor is a tier-1 site and in hard lockdown, the occupants required to stay at home for 14 days. The positive cases have all been moved to hotel quarantine, and the rest of the tower is a tier-2 exposure site. The other towers on the estate are subject to the same restrictions as the rest of Melbourne.

Ruth Eyakem, a resident of one of the  Flemington social housing towers, outside her building on Saturday.

Ruth Eyakem, a resident of one of the Flemington social housing towers, outside her building on Saturday.Credit:Luis Ascui

There were no police officers visible on the estate, and only a handful of security guards. Department of Health officials confided that a determined effort was being made to keep police off the estate during the response, unless they were really needed.

Ruth Eyakem, born in Ethiopia but a resident of Australia for 28 years, lived through last year’s lockdown, and has since started work as a health concierge, supporting the public health effort.
She was at work when her boss told her about 11am that she should leave work and isolate because her home tower had been listed as an exposure site. She came straight home.

Eyakem said she had one message for the wider community: “We are good people. We do not need the police force to be applied to us to do the right thing. We will obey the rules and take care of ourselves and others.”

Residents from the Flemington public housing towers at 130 Racecourse Road queue at a makeshift COVID-19 testing centre on Saturday.

Residents from the Flemington public housing towers at 130 Racecourse Road queue at a makeshift COVID-19 testing centre on Saturday. Credit:Luis Enrique Ascui

Meanwhile, there is every sign that the Health Department understands that this part of the COVID-19 response is key to restoring its reputation after the strong criticism from the Ombudsman, Human Rights Watch and the hotel quarantine inquiry.

Department secretary Euan Wallace was on site on Saturday morning, and later Jeroen Weimar, commander of the state government’s coronavirus response, was spotted watching the setting-up of a marquee where residents would be brought for COVID-19 testing.

Nor Shanino was raised in the tower at 130 Racecourse Road. His parents and sister still live there, and he is now a community worker who helps represent the community to the government.
Asked about the government response, he said: “Well, it’s a back-handed compliment but it’s better than the disaster we had last year.”

He had been to the estate on Saturday afternoon, delivering groceries for his family and other residents.

Last year, efforts by community members to get goods to family and friends was a flashpoint of tension with police and an initially condescending and intransigent bureaucracy. This time, though, it went smoothly. Community members employed as health concierges helped deliver the goods without breaching infection control.

The Flemington towers last July when residents were forced into lockdown without warning due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Flemington towers last July when residents were forced into lockdown without warning due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Credit:Penny Stephens

Anxiety on the estate had been rising after COVID-19 cases were detected at Al-Taqwa College, in the outer western suburb of Truganina, which is attended by many children from the Flemington towers.

The Health Department and Victorian Multicultural Commission stepped up efforts earlier this year to involve the community in the public health response.

There were Zoom meetings for community and faith leaders on Thursday and Friday evenings, with the first attended by Premier Daniel Andrews, who took questions and told attendees “we need you”.

Senior Health Department officials assured the attendees that “lessons had been learned” from what happened a year ago – not least about the strength of the community and its capacity to be involved in its own care.

Those who took part in the meetings were told that if it was necessary to lock down a public housing tower, it would be handled in the same way as the recent response in private apartment buildings – with a health-led effort and minimal police presence.

Public health messaging, however, remains a challenge. “Sarah” – a middle-aged woman from Sudan who lives at 130 Racecourse Road, was one of the positive COVID-19 cases on the estate last year.

On Saturday, she said she would not be getting vaccinated or tested for COVID-19, after seeing social media content from doctors in Sudan about the dangers of the vaccine. “I trust them more than this government that locked us up,” she said.

The atmosphere on the estate on Saturday was anxious, but low-key.

It is, as Nor Shanino said, early days. It is likely more cases will be detected. The response may be stepped up. There has been a lot of work to rebuild trust over the last year, but it remains fragile.

On Friday, some community members said people from the estate were moving to live with relatives elsewhere, for fear of being locked down.

“We will see,” Shanino said. “There are still things that need to improve. But yes, at least it is better. It needed to be better.”

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2021-08-07 08:59:13Z
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