The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

Added pressure to reopen regions

- BY DYLAN DE JONG

Coronaviru­s-free councils in the Wimmera are echoing a statewide call from municipal leaders asking the State Government to consider easing restrictio­ns in rural and regional areas.

A surge in active cases in Melbourne has led the government to embark on a testing blitz across COVID-19 hotspots in 10 city suburbs.

Authoritie­s recorded 75 active cases on Monday, the highest in more than two months, and 64 yesterday.

Rural Councils Victoria, RCV, is pressuring the State Government to consider easing restrictio­ns in local government areas that remain coronaviru­s-free.

RCV chair Mary-ann Brown said the organisati­on wrote a letter to the government last week and would follow-up again after July 12 if there were no further announceme­nts.

Wimmera municipal leaders are backing RCV as residents and businesses in their shires begin to feel a greater impact from re-tightening restrictio­ns.

Hindmarsh Shire mayor Rob Gersch, West Wimmera mayor Bruce Meyer and Yarriambia­ck mayor Graeme Massey said there could also be merit in freeing up more cross-border movement.

This came after South Australian member for Mount Gambier Troy Bell recommende­d his government consider extending travel arrangemen­ts permitted between border communitie­s further into western Victoria.

But as Victoria records daily spikes in COVID-19 cases, South Australia has scrapped its plan to reopen its state borders on July 20.

Cr Gersch said with Hindmarsh Shire yet to record any cases it would be unreasonab­le to retain current restrictio­ns.

“The shires in the non-virus areas feel quite strongly we shouldn’t be victimised for the areas that are affected, such as the hotspots in Melbourne,” he said.

“I think if people followed health regulation­s and did the right thing it would be a great opportunit­y.”

Cr Gersch said if the South Australian government extended travel conditions it would assist people who relied on businesses on both sides of the border.

“Opening the border would be viable. In Nhill we have a lot of people who travel to Bordertown for the vet, dentist and machinery dealership­s,” he said.

Room to move

Cr Meyer said he supported easing restrictio­ns across rural councils in Victoria.

“Everyone is asking why regional areas are still in lockdown in the same manner as the city when cases of COVID-19 are rare here,” he said. But he added although people relied on crossing the South Australian border for services in his shire, extending travel conditions would be difficult for authoritie­s to manage under latest restrictio­ns.

“We have 250 kilometres of state boundary – for the people who live close-by the border, Naracoorte, Bordertown and Penola are their service centres,” he said.

“To form a travel bubble 100km either side of the border so you can travel freely – that would be a good thing.

“But I think for people trying to administer that sort of thing it would be an absolute nightmare and you wouldn’t want someone with the virus to enter a community.”

Yarriambia­ck council recorded one COVID-19 case in late March and has since remained free of the virus.

Cr Massey said there needed to be more considerat­ion for rural areas that were completely COVID-19 free.

“We can’t keep on going how we’re going – if the middle of July comes and there’s little change in the number of cases, I think some businesses will go under,” he said.

“They’re coping at the moment, but then Jobkeeper is due to run out at the end of September.

“Our shire would be in favour of less restrictio­ns and maybe considerat­ion given to places where there is no coronaviru­s to resume a better and more relaxed lifestyle than what we’ve got.”

Hotspots lockdown

Premier Daniel Andrews has announced a return to stage-three restrictio­ns for people living in COVID-19 hotspots in Melbourne suburbs.

From 11:59pm tonight, postcodes 3038, 3064, 3047, 3060, 3012, 3032, 3055, 3042, 3021, 3046 will return to stay-at-home restrictio­ns until at least July 29. None are in regional Victoria.

Mr Andrews said for people living outside the locations, there were only four reasons to enter the ‘hotspot zones’ – shopping for food and supplies, care and caregiving, exercise, and study or work – if people were unable to do it from home. Businesses and facilities in these areas that have been able to recently reopen will again be restricted and cafes and restaurant­s will again only be open for take-away and delivery services.

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