Business Day

England to lift rules amid flurry of controvers­y

- William James London

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and finance minister Rishi Sunak will self-isolate in line with national guidance, abandoning a heavily criticised plan that would have allowed them to continue working.

The U-turn comes a day after health minister Sajid Javid said he had tested positive for Covid19 and while the government’s coronaviru­s response is under intense scrutiny.

Almost all remaining restrictio­ns in England will be lifted on Monday despite a surge in infections as ministers put their faith in the vaccine programme.

Cases are rising by more than 50,000 a day, and hundreds of thousands of Britons are being asked to self-isolate for 10 days, causing havoc for employers and parents, prompting train cancellati­ons and forcing some businesses to close their doors.

The government announced on Sunday that Johnson and Sunak had been exposed to a person with Covid-19 and would take part in a trial scheme that allowed them to keep working instead of self-isolating. But less than three hours later that decision had been reversed after a flurry of criticism from voters and business owners. Opposition politician­s said it was hypocritic­al for Johnson and Sunak to have tried to exempt themselves from some rules.

Housing minister Robert Jenrick confirmed that the government will go ahead with its “freedom day” plan on Monday, removing the requiremen­t to wear face masks, lifting limits on social gatherings and allowing high-risk businesses to reopen.

Johnson used a video message to plead with the public to take a cautious approach.

“Go forward tomorrow into the next step with all the right prudence and respect for other people, for the risks that the disease continues to present and, above all, please, please, please when you’re asked to get that second jab ... please come forward and do it.”

Ministers argue that the vaccinatio­n programme, under which 87.8% of the adult population has had one vaccine and 67.8% have been double vaccinated, has largely broken the link between cases and mortality.

“The last time we had cases at the level we do today, the number of people dying from the virus was 30 times the number it is today,” Jenrick told the BBC.

UK companies are urging the government to speed up changes to self-isolation rules after hundreds of thousands of employees from across the economy were removed from the workplace because of a surge in alerts that they should stay at home.

Businesses from stores to car factories are reporting disruption after more than halfa-million people in one week were contacted, or “pinged”, by the country’s coronaviru­s app.

Some retailers have suffered staff absences of up to 30%, according to a person familiar with the situation. Asos CEO Nick Beighton said the online fashion business is feeling the squeeze at warehouses and its London headquarte­rs.

As many as 900 workers at carmaker Nissan’s plant in Sunderland are absent, the BBC reported on Thursday. Aircraften­gine maker Rolls-Royce Holdings said it is adapting schedules to stop the disruption hampering production. At some meat processors, up to 10% of the workforce is affected, with product ranges being reduced.

The government is figuring out how to change the rules on self-isolation as Prime Minister Boris Johnson aims to lift just about all coronaviru­s measures for England today.

Lucy Frazer, the solicitorg­eneral, told Sky News on Friday that ministers are looking at the issue and recognise the “significan­t impact this is having on businesses”.

British Retail Consortium CEO Helen Dickinson said: “This will only get worse right across the economy, as cases are already rising fast and the final restrictio­ns are eased.” The government needs to bring forward the time when fully vaccinated people, or those with a negative test, no longer need to quarantine when “pinged” by the tracking system, she said.

A soaring infection rate has taken the gloss off the grand reopening, and now employers are complainin­g that too many staff are being advised to isolate regardless of their vaccinatio­n status. That is also worsening a labour shortfall in areas such as hospitalit­y and agricultur­e.

“This is on top of the desperate shortage of workers that the industry is already suffering,” said Nick Allen, head of the British Meat Processors Associatio­n. “If the UK workforce situation deteriorat­es further, companies will be forced to start shutting down production lines altogether.”

Health secretary Sajid Javid said that from August 16, those who have been fully vaccinated with two doses will not need to self-isolate and will instead be able to take Covid-19 tests.

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Some exemptions to the requiremen­t to stay at home are in place for front-line clinical staff, and the government is looking to expand that to more health workers, Johnson’s spokespers­on, Jamie Davies, told reporters.

He declined to discuss different industries, though added that all measures are constantly under review. At the moment, “the app is doing what it’s designed to do”, he said.

National Health Service data show 520,194 people in England and 9,932 in Wales were contacted by the app in the week to July 7, a record for both nations. Those recipients are advised to self-isolate for up to 10 days because they have been in close contact with someone who has tested positive. Figures from the Office for National Statistics show 89% of those who had contact with a Covidposit­ive person fully adhered to self-isolation requiremen­ts in the week to July 3.

The Unite union said the warnings are on the “verge of shutting” factories across the UK, particular­ly in the automotive sector.

“It’s clear the test-and-trace system needs an overhaul, with over two-thirds of the adult population now fully jabbed,” Confederat­ion of British Industry president Karan Bilimoria said in a statement.

That was echoed by Stephen Phipson, CEO of the Make UK manufactur­ing lobby. He said the issue has “escalated significan­tly” and has also hit the export of goods. Bilimoria and Phipson urged the government to bring forward its plan to relax isolation rules for fully vaccinated people on August 16.

The problem is only likely to get worse, with coronaviru­s cases on the rise, fuelled by the fast-spreading Delta variant. More than 48,000 people tested positive on Thursday, and more than a quarter-of-a-million people have done so over the past seven days, an increase of a third on the previous week.

Despite that, Johnson is pushing ahead with the final stage of his road map to unlock the economy, arguing the UK’s advanced vaccinatio­n programme has weakened the link between infections and hospitalis­ations. Nightclubs will be allowed to open for the first time in 16 months, the limits on indoor and outdoor gatherings will be dropped, and it will not be compulsory to wear masks in shops and on trains.

But Frazer said the country could get to a stage where it needs to look at restoring some restrictio­ns. That would be a dramatic setback for Johnson, who has called today’s already delayed reopening “irreversib­le”.

The surge in notificati­ons is the latest problem to beset the government’s test-and-trace programme, which as well as the app includes contact tracers who call people who test positive, find out their close contacts, and then call those people to advise them to isolate.

A lack of capacity meant contact tracing was all but abandoned early in the pandemic, before being ramped up last autumn. Even after spending more than half of its £22bn budget in the 2020/2021 fiscal year, the programme fell short of targets when coronaviru­s cases rose sharply in December. The app also took months to develop, with an initial home-grown version scrapped when it could not be made to work effectivel­y.

“Just as we thought the worst was over, Covid-19 threatens to take its biggest toll yet on the economy, thanks to the broken test-and-trace system,” Richard Walker, MD of supermarke­t chain Iceland Foods, tweeted. “The pingdemic is here and businesses need urgent change to avoid a self-inflicted economic wound.”

THIS WILL ONLY GET WORSE RIGHT ACROSS THE ECONOMY, AS CASES ARE ALREADY RISING FAST

IF THE SITUATION ... DETERIORAT­ES FURTHER, COMPANIES WILL START SHUTTING DOWN PRODUCTION LINES ALTOGETHER

 ?? /Bloomberg ?? At a standstill: An automobile on the production line inside the Nissan Motor plant in Sunderland, UK, on July 1 2021. About 900 workers were absent from the plant last week and up to 10% of the workforce is affected at some meat processors.
/Bloomberg At a standstill: An automobile on the production line inside the Nissan Motor plant in Sunderland, UK, on July 1 2021. About 900 workers were absent from the plant last week and up to 10% of the workforce is affected at some meat processors.

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