Las Vegas Review-Journal

Australian state: 90% target for shots

Nation’s largest to keep border closed this year

- By Rod Mcguirk

CANBERRA, Australia — While people are able now to travel freely in Australia’s more populated east, COVID-19-FREE Western Australia will maintain its tight restrictio­ns into next year, state leaders said Friday.

Western Australia is the largest state, covering a third of Australia’s land area. It also has the nation’s lowest vaccinatio­n rates, in part because the state has had few infections and life has been relatively normal throughout the pandemic.

Western Australia is the only Australian state or territory that does not plan to reopen this year. Vaccinated Australian­s have been free to travel the world through east coast airports in coronaviru­s-affected Sydney and Melbourne since Monday, when a 20-month-old internatio­nal travel ban was lifted.

Western Australia Premier Mark Mcgowan on Friday set a vaccinatio­n target of 90 percent of the population ages 12 and older for the border restrictio­ns to be relaxed. The milestone was forecast to be reached in late January or early February.

Mcgowan said he would set a date for the state to reopen once 80 percent of the target population had been vaccinated, which is expected to happen in mid-december.

Once that reopening date was set, it would stand even if the vaccinatio­n rate fell short of 90 percent by then.

“As far as world standards go, a rate of 90 percent will be an amazing achievemen­t,” Mcgowan said.

“Given our current vaccinatio­n rates, these targets are realistic and within our sights,” he added.

Only 63.7 percent of the target population in Western Australia was fully vaccinated, according to state data. Nationally, 79.6 percent of the population ages 16 and older were fully vaccinated, according to federal government data released on Friday.

Other states have or plan to substantia­lly relax pandemic restrictio­ns after 80 percent of their population­s ages 16 and older are vaccinated.

Western Australia’s sparsely populated north has some of the lowest vaccinatio­n rates in the country.

Mcgowan said parts of the state could be isolated by intrastate borders if their vaccinatio­n rates continued to lag. Such areas include the Pilbara region where the nation’s lucrative iron ore mining operations are based.

“Cutting off the Pilbara, or any region for that matter, is not something I want to do,” Mcgowan said.

“But if that’s what is required to protect the local community and local industries, then we will take that step based on the health advice at the time,” he added.

Government modeling showed that reopening that state at the 90 percent vaccinatio­n benchmark rather than 80 percent would mean COVID-19 cases occupying 70 percent fewer hospital beds, 75 percent fewer intensive care beds and 63 percent fewer deaths, Mcgowan said.

 ?? Bianca De Marchi The Associated Press ?? Passengers check in at an airport Friday in Sydney. Some flights between states restarted without any COVID-19 restrictio­ns.
Bianca De Marchi The Associated Press Passengers check in at an airport Friday in Sydney. Some flights between states restarted without any COVID-19 restrictio­ns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States