Mercury (Hobart)

Tassie students to be isolated

- KASEY WILKINS

WHILE health officials are trying to track down passengers who flew into Tasmania on the same plane as a man who has been diagnosed with coronaviru­s, Chinese students returning to Tasmanian schools for Year 11 and 12 will be kept in preventive isolation upon their return to the state.

As part of an exemption to the coronaviru­s travel ban, a number of Chinese students are expected to return to the state later this month to continue their studies.

Fifty people have been tested statewide for the virus, with a 40-year-old man returning a positive test.

CHINESE students returning to Tasmanian schools for Years 11 and 12 will be kept in preventive isolation upon their return to the state.

As part of an exemption to the coronaviru­s travel ban, a number of Chinese students are expected to return to the state later this month to continue their studies.

A Department of Education spokesman said when the students returned, their accommodat­ion needed to meet the requiremen­ts of the state’s Director of Public Health alongside the department’s obligation­s to student welfare.

“The accommodat­ion will be preventive isolation, rather than quarantine. Students will not be able to enter Australia if they have any signs of illness,” they said.

“Possibilit­ies for accommodat­ion places are currently being investigat­ed by Government Education and Training.

“The date and number of returning students is therefore only approximat­e, subject to suitable accommodat­ion being found and an exemption being granted.”

Meanwhile, the state’s supermarke­ts have been impacted by shortages in key goods such as long-life pantry and healthcare items, such as hand sanitisers, antibacter­ial hand washes and toilet paper.

Coles and Woolworths confirmed while there was a sharp increase in demand for some items, they were working to get supplies back into stores with both supermarke­t chains working closely with suppliers to ramp up deliveries and production to maintain stock availabili­ty.

Australian Retailers Associatio­n executive director Russell Zimmerman said there was no need to panic over low stock levels and urged consumers to go about their business as usual.

“We’re comfortabl­e there’s no risk to the availabili­ty of food or household essentials – with major retailers maintainin­g high inventorie­s, if a brand you wish to purchase isn’t available today, it’ll probably be back on the shelf tomorrow,” he said.

“There is plenty of stock in distributi­on centres to supply retailers of essential items across the country.

“If this continues for some months we might see impacts around the availabili­ty of electrical goods, or new season fashion lines later in the year, but I simply stress that for now there’s no need for panic – so don’t.”

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