Leek Post & Times

Lockdown with a difference...

With a month-long coronaviru­s lockdown in force across the country from tomorrow, we take a look at the NEW RULES AND EXPLAIN HOW THEY DIFFER FROM THE FIRST LOCKDOWN IMPOSED BACK IN MARCH...

-

THERE will be some key difference­s between England’s new coronaviru­s lockdown, which begins tomorrow and the UK’S nationwide restrictio­ns introduced in March.

One of the biggest changes, no doubt welcomed by millions of parents, is that schools will stay open during the envisaged monthlong lockdown. In March, they were closed to all pupils except children of key workers.

Nurseries, colleges and universiti­es will also stay open, but university students have been told not to return home during term time, although at this stage they will be able to leave campus for the Christmas holiday.

After-school provisions and sports clubs will be suspended, but playground­s and parks will remain open.

People are allowed to leave their home for outdoor exercise as many times per day as they want, contrastin­g with the contentiou­s and difficult to police “once a day” rule of the spring.

Such activity can be undertaken with other members of your household or one person from another household (a “one plus one” rule) that was not in place earlier this year.

Examples of recreation include meeting up with a friend in the park for a walk or to sit on a bench and eat a sandwich.

People are still allowed to go out for medical needs, to care for the vulnerable, or shopping for necessitie­s, but these journeys should be as seldom as possible.

Places of worship will again be closed to most forms of communal gathering, but they can remain open for private prayer, unlike in the first phase of lockdown.

Funerals will be limited to a maximum of 30 people, although it is advised that only close family members attend. Headstone settings and the scattering of ashes should have no more than 15 people.

Weddings and civil partnershi­p ceremonies are only allowed in “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces”.

Formal shielding for the vulnerable will not be reintroduc­ed, unlike in spring when at-risk people were told not to leave home for any reason and extra support was on offer, including food parcel deliveries.

However, the age definition of “clinically vulnerable” has been lowered to 60, down from 70 in the first lockdown.

“These changes will mean many hundreds of thousands of people will now be classed as clinically vulnerable when in spring they were not,” Paul Hunter, professor in Medicine, University of East Anglia, said in a statement issued by the Science Media Centre.

“Shielding has not been reinstated, but it is important for people in this age group to realise they are more vulnerable to severe disease if they catch the infection.”

One major difference is that elite football and a range of other profession­al sports will be allowed to continue, unlike earlier in the year, albeit still without crowds in stadiums.

The Premier League season was suspended on March 13 and did not resume until June 17, with games broadcast originally free-to-air, but are now mainly pay-for-view or via subscripti­on packages.

But Leek Town’s season was due to be temporaril­y suspended after last night’s game at Ilkeston.

Northern Premier League officials have drawn up plans for the rest of the season, depending on how long lockdown lasts.

Leek Town chairman John Eeles said: “We will be fine because the funds generated have been spent wisely and the stewardshi­p of the club is very good.”

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he expects the lockdown to remain in for four weeks until December 2 – but the March measures had an expected timeframe of at least three weeks.

The other major change is that the rules were broadly the same across all of the UK in March, but the devolved government­s in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland now have their own measures in place, and have yet to indicate if they will match the new English provisions.

Wales is part way through a 17-day “firebreak” lockdown which started on October 23 and will last until November 9.

The majority of Scots will be placed into Level 3 of a new five-tier system from Monday, with the rest of the country in either Levels 1 or 2. This follows restrictio­ns across the central belt of Scotland that saw pubs closed in October and other restrictio­ns on alcohol sales. In Northern Ireland, pubs and restaurant­s were closed for four weeks starting on October 16 with the exception of takeaways and deliveries. Schools were closed for two weeks.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom