The Scotsman

Inside Trasnport

It’s not surprising we’re almost back in lockdown, says Alastair Dalton

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It would be comical if it wasn’t so serious. From what I describe as a “suicide granny” careering down a supermarke­t aisle straight for me to a masked old man complainin­g I was giving them too wide a berth, it’s still a mad world out there trying to avoid catching Covid.

Eight months on from being told to stay t wo metres away from each other, it’s becoming increasing­ly irritating that too many people simply haven’t got the message.

We are encouraged to walk more for our physical and mental health, and this will become more impor tant as winter draws in and the temptation to lounge about in our often poorly-ventilated homes becomes stronger.

That might sound alarmist, even hysterical, but there are t wo things that you have to bear in mind.

First, the t wo -metre social- distancing rule was set by the S cottish Government – it is official, and the “default physical distancing requiremen­t”.

In July, Nicola Sturgeon announced that a review of the evidence by the Covid-19 Advisor y Group “makes clear that the fundamenta­l science around distance and transmissi­on remains unchanged and that risk increases with proximit y to an infected individual”.

That default has been reduced to one metre in shops, cafes and bars where additional safet y measures are in place, such as maskwearin­g and one -way systems.

But pavements aren’t one way and pedestrian­s don’t have to wear masks, so t wo metres still applies out there.

S econd, and I might be completely wrong about this, but if folk aren’t bothering to keep their required distance on the street or in shops, as I’ve found, what hope is there that such individual­s will pay any attention to it in other situations, like stopping for a chat with people they know?

This is probably a ver y unfair comparison, but police are par ticularly interested in peo - ple on the fringes of criminalit y, such as fare dodgers on trains, because that’s often found to be the tip of the iceberg in terms of their illegal activities.

S o are those who chose to ignore, or are still ignorant of, the need for social distancing, more likely to break other Covid restrictio­ns like visiting other people’s houses with the extra risk that brings – and therefore there’s even more reason for the rest of us to give them a wide ber th?

In the case of those worr ying encounters I’ve mentioned, the old lady who seemed intent on pushing right past me in the supermarke­t returned my horrified look as I shrunk back against the shelves with a fixed glaikit grin as if social distancing was some big joke.

As for the masked old man, that was a first. Encounteri­ng him in a car park, he looked like he was changing direction so I altered my path.

But rather than acknowledg­e my thoughtful­ness, I got a barrage of abuse along the lines of “Is there something wrong with me? I’m wearing a mask”.

Thankfully, such cases are the exception, and most people I pass are conscious of the need to distance.

If I stop, that’s normally enough of a reminder for the others. But I’m told that can look weird – and I wish I didn’t have to.

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