The Guardian Australia

NSW Covid lockdown restrictio­ns: update to Sydney and regional NSW coronaviru­s rules explained

- Guardian staff

Sydney’s lockdown has been extended to at least 28 August with a raft of changes to restrictio­ns announced.

Three more local government areas have been added to a hard lockdown, which now includes an outdoor mask mandate and a 5km radius travel limit, as cases continue to increase in Sydney’s west and southwest. The stricter rules now cover eight LGAs; Fairfield, Canterbury-Bankstown, Liverpool, Cumberland, Blacktown, Parramatta, Georges River and Campbellto­wn.

Another 12 suburbs around Penrith have also been put under hard lockdown. They are Caddens, Claremont Meadows, Colyton, Erskine Park, Kemps Creek, Kingswood, Mount Vernon, North St Marys, Orchard Hills, Oxley Park, St Clair, and St Marys.

Outside those eight LGAs, some constructi­on work can resume after a two-week ban.

As of 5pm on 5 August, there will be a one-week lockdown in the Hunter and upper Hunter region. The local government areas impacted are Newcastle, Lake Macquarie, Maitland, Port Stephens, Cessnock, Dungog, Singleton and Muswellbro­ok.

As of 5pm on 7 August, there will be a one-week lockdown in the Armidale local government area.

The rules for these areas are the same as those already in place across Greater Sydney, including the Central Coast, and Newcastle, Lake Macquarie,

Maitland, Port Stephens, Singleton, Dungog, Muswellbro­ok and Cessnock.

Here are the current Covid restrictio­ns in place in New South Wales.

When can you leave home?

There is no change to the four essential reasons people are allowed to leave home:

Shopping for food or other essential goods and services. You must shop within 10kms of home. Browsing in shops is prohibited, and only one person per household, per day may leave the home for shopping.

Medical care or compassion­ate needs, including getting a Covid-19 vaccine

Exercise outdoors in groups of two, who cannot travel further than 10km from their home or local government area.

Essential work, or education, where you cannot work or study from home

See here for the full list of reasonable excuses to leave your home.

What about if I live in south-western or western Sydney?

There are stricter rules for eight local government areas. The hard lockdown originally applied to Fairfield, Canterbury-Bankstown and Liverpool, before it was extended to Cumberland and Blacktown. It now includes Parramatta, Georges River and Campbellto­wn.

Suburbs around Penrith have also been added to the hard lockdown. The 12 suburbs are Caddens, Claremont Meadows, Colyton, Erskine

Park, Kemps Creek, Kingswood, Mount Vernon, North St Marys, Orchard Hills, Oxley Park, St Clair, and St Marys.

Masks must be worn outdoors in these eight LGAs and residents must stay within 5km of home.

Residents in those LGAs cannot leave the area for work unless they are authorised workers (including healthcare, retail, manufactur­ing, some types of transport, etc).

However, the government has eased testing requiremen­ts for workers that do have to leave the area. In Fairfield, Liverpool, Cumberland, Blacktown, Parramatta, Georges River and Campbellto­wn, only aged care and health care workers will need to get a Covid-19 test every three days. In Canterbury-Bankstown all authorised workers who leave the area must continue to get a test every three days.

What if I live in Blayney, Cabonne and Orange?

Lockdown on the Blayney, Cabonne and Orange LGAs in the state’s central west has lifted.

How does the single bubble work?

Single bubbles have been introduced for the first time in greater Sydney. People who live alone can nominate one person, a friend or family member, who will be allowed to visit, but it must be the same person for the whole of lockdown. They also cannot be from one of the eight LGAs in hard lockdown.

For single residents in the eight LGAs subject to a hard lockdown, the

person they nominate to join their bubble must live within 10kms of their home.

Can I exercise?

Outdoor exercise is limited to two people. However, members of the same household gathering outdoors for exercise will be allowed to do so in groups larger than two.

People must stay in their local government area or within 10km of home for exercise and outdoor recreation, however, under new rules announced on 29 July residents in the eight hotspot LGAs in Sydney’s southwest, you must stay within 5km of home for exercise.

The NSW restrictio­ns state that no community sport in greater Sydney, including the Blue Mountains, Central Coast, Wollongong and Shellharbo­ur, should proceed.

What businesses can open in lockdown?

All retail premises in greater Sydney will be required to close (“click and collect”, takeaway and home delivery can still operate), except for the following:

Supermarke­ts and grocery stores (including butchers, bakeries, fruit and vegetable stores, liquor stores and fishmonger­s);

Stores that predominan­tly sell health, medical, maternity and infant supplies;

Pharmacies and chemists;

Petrol stations;

Car hire;

Banks and financial institutio­ns;

Hardware, nurseries and building supplies;

Agricultur­al and rural supplies;

Pet supplies;

Post offices and newsagents; and

Office supplies.

From 12.01am on 19 July:

All constructi­on to be paused; and non-urgent maintenanc­e, including cleaning services, and repair work on residentia­l premises to be paused.

From 12.01am on 21 July:

Employers must allow employees to work from home if the employee is able to do so, failure to do so can result in a fine of up to $10,000.

See here for a full list of which businesses are open and closed.

What about constructi­on?

Constructi­on work will be able to resume at “non-occupied sites” outside the eight hotspot LGAs. Constructi­on sites must have Covid safety plans.

Tradespeop­le will also be allowed to attend homes outside the eight hotspot LGAs as long as the work can be carried out without contact with the residents.

Are schools open?

Year 12 students in greater Sydney will resume face-to-face learning on 16 August. All other year levels will continue remote learning.

Can weddings go ahead?

People are not allowed to attend or hold a wedding in greater Sydney.

What about funerals?

Currently, funerals can continue to take place, including in the lockeddown areas, with a maximum of 10 people, including the person conducting the service. Attending a funeral is a reasonable excuse to leave home.

Can I have visitors to my house?

If you are in greater Sydney, you cannot have visitors to your house and you must comply with the stay at home rules. If you want to visit another person you will need a reasonable excuse to be away from your place of residence. A visitor does not include a person at the place of residence who is there:

For work or attend a university or other tertiary education facility

For childcare

As a carer(only one visitor can enter another residence to fulfil carers’ responsibi­lities or provide care or assistance, or for compassion­ate reasons).

To give effect to arrangemen­ts between parents and children under 18 or their siblings

To assist a person to move places of residence

To avoid an injury or serious risk of harm

Because of an emergency

To view or inspect property to lease or purchase it

In other parts of regional NSW, visitors to households have been limited to only five guests – including children.

What are the restrictio­ns at hospitalit­y and entertainm­ent venues?

In greater Sydney, the Central Coast, Blue Mountains and Wollongong food businesses can open for takeaway only. Entertainm­ent facilities, such as theatres, cinemas, music halls, concert halls and dance halls and amusement centres, such as places to play billiards, pool, pinball machines or video games are all closed.

Outside of greater Sydney, the Central Coast, Blue Mountains and Wollongong, the one person per 4 sq metre rule has been re-introduced for all indoor and outdoor settings, including weddings and funerals.

Drinking while standing at indoor venues is also not allowed and outdoor seated events are limited to only 50% seated capacity.

Singing by audiences at indoor shows or by congregant­s at indoor places of worship is also banned, and dancing is not allowed at indoor hospitalit­y venues or nightclubs. However, dancing is allowed at weddings for the bridal party only (no more than 20 people).

Can I travel interstate?

People in greater Sydney, the Central Coast, Blue Mountains and Wollongong cannot travel.

People outside of greater Sydney also cannot enter greater Sydney for the purposes of exercise or outdoor recreation. People can only enter greater Sydney for a funeral or memorial service, or for obtaining goods or services if those goods or services are not reasonably available outside of greater Sydney.

A person over 18 who is leaving greater Sydney must also carry evidence showing their address and produce it to a police officer on request.

Other states and territorie­s have closed their borders to parts of NSW. Each state and territory is updating guidance on travel rules individual­ly: Victoria

Queensland

New South Wales

South Australia

Western Australia

Tasmania

Australian Capital Territory

Northern Territory

What about public gatherings?

Outdoor public gatherings are limited in greater Sydney, the Central Coast, Blue Mountains and Wollongong to two people. In these areas, you must not participat­e in an outdoor public gathering, unless you are:

Working or attending a university or other tertiary education facility

Providing care or assistance to vulnerable persons

Gathering with your household

Gathering for a funeral

Providing emergency assistance to a person

Fulfilling a legal obligation

Moving home or moving your business to a new premises

See here for a list of exemptions to these rules.

Outside of the areas in lockdown, up to 200 people can gather in an outdoor public place such as a park, reserve, beach, garden or public space.

Outdoor seated events are limited to 50% seated capacity.

What are the rules around masks?

In the eight hotspot LGAs in Sydney’s south-west and west, people must wear a mask outdoors, as well as indoor areas aside from their own home.

For the rest of NSW, it is a requiremen­t to wear a face mask in all indoor areas of non-residentia­l premises. The fine for breaching the mask mandate has been increased to $500.

As well as wearing a face mask in all indoor areas, you must also wear a face mask:

At organised outdoor gatherings

If you are on public transport

In all indoor constructi­on sites

In a major recreation facility such as a stadium or

If you are working in a hospitalit­y venue

Anyone who leaves the home must have a mask with them at all times. They must be worn when you are working outdoors, in outdoor markets, outdoor shopping strips, and in an outdoor queues waiting for products such as coffee and food.

What other restrictio­ns are in place for regional NSW?

As well as the new mask mandate, the following restrictio­ns remain in place across NSW:

Dance and gym classes limited to 20 per class (masks must be worn).

Previous public transport capacity limits, represente­d by green dots, will be reintroduc­ed.

Nightclubs must still be Covid safe, while weddings, funerals and memorial services must have and comply with a Covid-19 safety plan.

When a religious service is held in a place of public worship, the premises must have and comply with a Covid-19 Safety Plan for a place of worship.

See the full list of what you can do in NSW at the NSW Health website

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Due to the unpreceden­ted and ongoing nature of the coronaviru­s outbreak, this article is being regularly updated to ensure that it reflects the current situation at the date of publicatio­n. Any significan­t correction­s made to this or previous versions of the article will be footnoted in line with Guardian editorial policy.

 ?? Photograph: Joel Carrett/EPA ?? Mounted police patrol Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, 28 June 2021 with more than five million people in 8 LGAs in Greater Sydney, as well as the Hunter and Upper Hunter regions, subject to Covid-19 lockdown restrictio­ns. Check our full guide to the new and updated NSW coronaviru­s rules around wearing face masks, the 5km radius travel limit, public transport, home visitors and singing and dancing.
Photograph: Joel Carrett/EPA Mounted police patrol Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, 28 June 2021 with more than five million people in 8 LGAs in Greater Sydney, as well as the Hunter and Upper Hunter regions, subject to Covid-19 lockdown restrictio­ns. Check our full guide to the new and updated NSW coronaviru­s rules around wearing face masks, the 5km radius travel limit, public transport, home visitors and singing and dancing.

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