The Chronicle

COVID HUB INCOMING

Works begins on 1000-bed Toowoomba quarantine hub as Premier forges ahead without Federal support

- JARRARD POTTER

THE Wagners have already broken ground on a Covid quarantine facility near Toowoomba and expect to have 500 beds available by the end of the year.

In a shock announceme­nt yesterday, Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk unveiled her government had partenered with Wagner Corporatio­n to build the 1000-bed facility at Wellcamp Airport.

Wagner Corporatio­n will be responsibl­e for constructi­on, with the accommodat­ion modules to be manufactur­ed in Queensland.

The Queensland Government will operate the facility once it is up and running.

“We all know that our hotels were not built to deal with the delta strain of this virus,” Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said.

“We need regional quarantine facilities. I have been advocating for this for a long, long time, it is a no-brainer.

“If we want to open our country up, and we want to open our states up, regional quarantine is part of the answer.”

It is expected to be fully complete in the first quarter of 2022.

EARTHWORKS have already started at the site where the controvers­ial 1000-bed quarantine hub will stand at Wellcamp Airport outside Toowoomba after a shock announceme­nt from the Queensland Government.

Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced yesterday the government had struck a deal with John Wagner and the Wagner family.

Constructi­on work on the facility has already begun and will be completed by Wagner Corporatio­n, with the state government to operate the facility once it is up and running.

Half of the facility - 500 beds - is expected to be available by the end of the year.

Taking a “build it and they will come” attitude Ms Palaszczuk said a deal had yet to be reached with the federal government on internatio­nal arrivals at the airport.

“We can bus people from Brisbane up here if we have to,” she said.

“In the end it’s a no-brainer: here’s the airport, send the flights here.

“We’re hoping that we’ll be able to utilise the airport. We will continue those discussion­s and we will use whatever options are open to us.

“We will put this centre to good use.”

With the facility expected to be at full capacity in the first quarter of next year, Ms Palaszczuk said the hub was part of an effort to phase out hotel quarantine.

“Hotel quarantine has been an initial defence against the virus coming in, it was one of the earliest decisions national cabinet made it was one of the best decisions this country made, but hotels weren’t designed to handle a global pandemic,” she said.

Wagner Corporatio­n chairman John Wagner said the quarantine hub was mooted a long time ago and could have already been built and operationa­l by now.

“As the landlord of this facility for the state government we are working through the final design criteria to make sure that we have the best fitfor-purpose regional accommodat­ion facility for return travellers that there is in the country or the world,” he said.

“This is going to be a great economic boost for Toowoomba, it will create a lot of local employment, our local producers just by the fact that we will have to produce 3000 meals a day will really benefit from this and it will help get Queensland out of Covid and on the road to economic recovery which we desperatel­y need.”

Ms Palaszczuk would not reveal how much the facility would cost to build, except to say “it’s a lot cheaper than Pinkenba”, referring to the quarantine hub the federal government approved for Brisbane earlier this year.

She first floated the idea of a Covid quarantine hub outside Toowoomba in January, however has been in a backand-forth debate with Prime Minister Scott Morrison as to whether the Garden City was

This is about keeping the community safe Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk

a suitable location.

When asked if the Prime Minister knew about the facility, the Premier said “I’m quite sure he does now”.

“These are the types of facilities the Commonweal­th should have built by now right across the country,” Ms Palaszczuk said.

“What we’ve seen is there’s people wanting to return home and the more facilities that we have the safer it is for them to return home.”

Ms Palaszczuk said the state government had a 12month lease on the facility with options to extend the agreement for up to three years, but didn’t reveal any potential future uses for the facility.

The Premier dismissed concerns the facility would put the Toowoomba community at risk of a Covid outbreak, or put further strain on the region’s hospital system, with seriously ill people with Covid to be transporte­d to specialist facilities in Brisbane.

“This is about keeping the community safe,” she said.

“This is going to be a great boost for our defence against the Delta virus in this country.”

Up to 450 jobs will be created during constructi­on of the Wellcamp quarantine hub, and Deputy Premier Steven Miles said the facility would be the first completed in the country behind Howard Springs.

“The talk about this facility has gone on for too long.”

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 ?? Photo: Jarrard Potter ?? JOINING FORCES: Wagner Corporatio­n chairman John Wagner at the site of a quarantine hub that will be built at Wellcamp Airport in Toowoomba.
Photo: Jarrard Potter JOINING FORCES: Wagner Corporatio­n chairman John Wagner at the site of a quarantine hub that will be built at Wellcamp Airport in Toowoomba.
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