The Independent

Indoor gyms and pools will be able to reopen on 25 July

- JON STONE POLICY CORRESPOND­ENT

Indoor gyms, pools and leisure centres have been given the go-ahead to reopen from later this month, the government has announced. Outdoor swimming pools in England will start to reopen from tomorrow, while indoor pools, gyms and other sports facilities will have coronaviru­s restrictio­ns lifted on 25 July. The move followed an announceme­nt that outdoor theatre, opera, music and dance events will also be permitted with limited and socially distanced audiences in England from 11 July.

Unveiling the measures at a press conference yesterday, Oliver Dowden, the secretary of state for digital, culture, media and sport, urged the public to “work out to help out”. It follows an earlier slogan calling for people to “eat out to help out”, referring to restaurant meals.

Mr Dowden told reporters at the Downing Street press conference: “I’m really urging people to get out

there and to play their part: buy the tickets for outdoor plays and musical recitals; get to your local gallery and support your local businesses.

“Our fight began with a collective effort and I really hope it will end with one. At the beginning we all stayed at home to protect the NHS and save lives; now the British public has a new part to play. It’s time to eat out to help out, to enjoy the arts to help out, and to work out to help out. It’s over to all of you to help the country recover safely.”

The announceme­nt on outdoor performanc­es gives the green light for venues such as Glyndebour­ne in East Sussex, and Cornwall’s Minack Theatre, to reopen this summer – as well as such ventures as the drive-in version of the West End musical Six.

A change in planning rules will also mean theatres, concert halls and live music venues will be protected from demolition or change of use by developers, preventing those that have been made temporaril­y vacant during lockdown disappeari­ng altogether and giving extra security as they start to reopen.

All tickets must be purchased online and venues are encouraged to move towards e-ticketing to help with track-and-trace operations in case of an outbreak at a performanc­e.

Mr Dowden said: “Our culture, heritage and arts are too precious to lose. That’s why we’re protecting venues like theatres from redevelopm­ent if they fall on hard times.”

Despite government efforts to get people out of their homes, however, most Britons say they won’t be returning to restaurant­s any time soon, according to new polling. One survey by YouGov found that just 8 per cent of people said they will “definitely” use the meal discount scheme unveiled by the chancellor on Wednesday, with 24 per cent saying they probably will. This compares with 52 per cent saying they definitely will not or probably will not.

Mr Dowden said at the press conference that face coverings will not be required in gyms but that other “mitigating measures”, such as regular cleaning, will be put in place. He said the government’s approach to face coverings was “context specific” and said it had been endorsed by scientific advisers as a ”proportion­ate approach whereby wearing masks is one way of mitigating risks, but it sits alongside a whole suite of other things”, including washing hands and social distancing.

Asked whether restrictio­ns would make reopening facilities “less fun”, he replied: ”The judgement we’ve taken with [pubs] and swimming pools and elsewhere is it is better to reopen with those restrictio­ns than not reopen at all.

“Of course it is going to take a while for people’s confidence to build. It is rarely the case that you pull up the shutter and everyone comes rushing in. But equally the experience in the UK and elsewhere is that over

time people have gained confidence and have started to engage more.”

 ?? (Getty/iStock) ?? Sanitiser being used to clean a treadmill in a gym
(Getty/iStock) Sanitiser being used to clean a treadmill in a gym
 ?? (Reuters TV) ?? The culture secretary, Oliver Dowden, announcing the new changes
(Reuters TV) The culture secretary, Oliver Dowden, announcing the new changes

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