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Since rates of coronavirus infection do not look like symptoms of slowdown, a number of complicated new blocking measures are likely.
Although Boris Johnson needs some other national blockade, the prime minister warned that northern England could be subject to stricter regulations and regulations, with parts of Yorkshire being affected.
According to media reports, pubs and restaurants in the north may be forced to close in an attempt to prevent COVID infection rates from soaring amid rumors that new regulations could be introduced on Monday.
However, there has not yet been an official government announcement about what will happen next with the leaders of northern cities in darkness and confusion.
Recently, Leeds joined other northern primary forces to ask the government to establish its own local blocking rules, but so far those forces have not been transferred.
As the scenario becomes desperate throughout the day, Mirror Online has analyzed what has just been announced and when new regulations and measures can be introduced.
Here’s everything we’re doing, and we don’t know, until now.
Boris Johnson is reportedly final pubs in giant portions of northern England as a component of a new “three-tier” local lockdown system.
Restaurants and some would be forced to close, but workplaces and schools would remain open.
The multi-level formula will be released last week, however, not all curtains are expected until Monday. We may have an ad before Mondy, but we still don’t know for sure.
According to reports, “level one” will be existing national restrictions, the curfew rule in six- and ten-hour bars.
Level two would come with a ban on family gatherings, as already existed in local locks, and point 3 would pass more than existing local locks through final hospitality.
Level 3 can be applied to primary hot spots in the north of England, where the virus is increasing.
No10 insisted Wednesday that it would “not hesitate” to act, but plans to announce the simplified three-level blocking formula have been delayed. Critics would say the government is “doubting” right now.
Something’s going to happen.
A Source of Whitehall admitted to the Mirror: “Knowledge for the specific North is increasingly troubling. “And a downing Street source told The Sun, “The numbers are going in the right direction, and soon there will come a time when we’ll have to do more. “
No10 reported that hospital admissions in the Northwest increased by 43. 6% in a week, from 78 to 112 in 7 days until October 1. In the northeast, they increased by 45. 9%, from 72 to 105.
There are now 125. 7 cases matching another 100,000 people in the UK, almost twice as many as last week.
And yesterday 14,542 effects were shown, or more than 2,000 the day before.
Some 478 more people were urgently transferred to the hospital in England with Covid on Sunday, the maximum in 4 months and compared to 241 the previous week.
One thing critics should soften is 10 p. m. curfew bar.
The prime minister confronts mutineered Conservative MPs whose wrath over curfew has intensified after greene King’s pub cut 800 jobs across the country blaming restrictions.
Ministers, you may be late until 11 a. m. as in Northern Ireland.
But when asked if he plans to replace the curfew from 10 to 23, the prime minister’s press secretary said, “No, politics is how it is. “
Some SAGE experts say stricter national blocking rules will have to be imposed, and that they are even “inevitable. “
Scientists have pressured the Prime Minister to act now with “strict” rules.
Two SAGE experts said the features come with a “circuit cut” lock, a brief era of very strict restrictions to reduce the rate of new infections in the UK (see below).
Sage member Professor John Edmunds criticized existing “light touch” measures and told BBC Newsnight: “Actually, this delays the inevitable. “
Professor Callum Semple, a member of SAGE, also said he would be considered a national “circuit breaker. “
A third expert, Professor Stephen Reicher, warned that the virus could be as successful as in March until the end of the month if it continued to shower at the current rate.
Professor Reicher, who is part of SAGE’s behavioral sciences subgroup, told the BBC: “The news is that we have the opportunity to do something.
“If we wasted this window of opportunity, we’re in trouble, so we’d communicate about coming back in March in terms of full blocking measures. “
Amid the chaos, No10 made it clear that the next lockout measures would be regional than national.
This is despite the tension of the councillors to pass more and deploy anything in England.
When asked about Boris Johnson’s views, his spokesman said, “He believes that having national measures in place and then having stricter measures in spaces where the prevalence of cases is higher remains the right approach. “
The prime minister’s spokesman added: “We are seeing a buildup of coronavirus cases across the country.
“But they are developing in the northeast and northwest and that is a cause for concern.
“We will not hesitate to take additional action in spaces where instances and hospitalizations are expanding dramatically, to communities, the NHS and save lives. “
Residents of the vast northeastern and northwestern expanses, not to mention Birmingham and others, are already prohibited from meeting other people with those who do not live indoors or gardens.
But 19 of the 20 spaces that have been under local blockage for at least two months have noticed that infections soared despite repression. Critics say the restrictions just don’t work.
Whitehall has developed a “three-tier” formula to simplify locks.
At the moment, the regulations are different in all domains and you should look for your city on a government site.
Under the new system, one would bring the badge ‘Level 1’, ‘Level 2’, etc.
Matt Hancock said Monday that he was “working on” the plans and would take them to the House of Commons. Ministers reported that this would take place this week.
But it’s not shown yet and number 10 said that would be the case “in due course. “
In all this, the No10 has ruled new national regulations, nor other things like the “rule of six” of a complete blockade as in March.
But the first is more likely than the second, as number 10 sees a whole national closure as one last hotel that would paralyze the economy.
Schools are unlikely to close. No10 has made it clear at various events that sending millions of young people home like March would be a last resort.
SAGE’s advisor, Professor Calum Semple, is under pressure because there is “mounting evidence that young people in school number one are not amplifying this disease. “
He added: “In the students of the best schools, again, it is less than in adults, however, it is such a gradient of effects that sixth graders probably have the same threat as adults, although that knowledge is less stable.
The government has yet to make a decision.
While an Assembly of Golden Command supposedly signed the pub’s closure last night, it has still been approved by ministers.
There are divisions within the Cabinet between so-called “pigeons” that are more focused on saving the NHS and the most economy-oriented “hawks”.
Chancellor Rishi Sunak, who has admitted that the cabinet is not “robots” and has different perspectives, accused a report of scolding plans for a three-tier system.
The Telegraph said it was looking for decisions under the formula for passing through him and Health Secretary Matt Hancock.
But Treasury resources have categorically denied it, and the Chancellor’s best friend has denied it and totally.
Labour leader Keir Starmer asked Johnson to demonstrate leadership and provide answers to other people in the Northwest.
Infection rates have soared in recent days and the virus may double once a week; Worse, infections in the elderly are on the rise.
Professor Stephen Reicher, who is part of SAGE’s behavioral sciences subgroup, warned that the virus could be as successful as in March through the end of this month if it continues to double at the current rate.
Sir Keir said: “The Prime Minister wishes to perceive that local communities are angry and frustrated.
“Then he will point himself out to the other people in Bury, Burnley and Bolton and say, “What do you think is the central challenge that is causing this?”
He added: “The Prime Minister cannot explain why a domain is subject to restrictions. You can’t know what the other restrictions are and you can’t know how the restrictions end. It’s getting ridiculous. “