The Guardian (USA)

Newcastle council chief hits out at 'contradict­ory' Covid rules

- Helen Pidd North of England editor

The UK government’s “confusing and contradict­ory” Covid restrictio­ns for the north-east of England have left space for “dangerous” conspiracy theories to fill the void, the leader of Newcastle city council has warned.

Nick Forbes, the city’s Labour leader since 2011, said confusion over the latest restrictio­ns – which even Boris Johnson got wrong – were “deeply unhelpful”, admitting even his own enforcemen­t officers were not immediatel­y clear how to interpret them.

Some pubs in the city were already refusing to comply with social distancing restrictio­ns before they were tightened with little warning this week, said Forbes. He said the confusion allowed conspiraci­es to breed, such as the false claim that the 10pm curfew was “part of a grand plan by the council to abolish alcohol” to appease Muslims.

On Monday, Matt Hancock, the health secretary, announced that tighter restrictio­ns would apply from Wednesday across the north-east of England.

Forbes received no warning and only received the guidelines on Wednesday morning, after the restrictio­ns came in at midnight.

“We didn’t get any pre-warning that the government were going to make that announceme­nt. It was deeply frustratin­g because the gap between the government making the announceme­nt and the regulation­s being made public meant there was space for conspiracy theorists to fill the void. It’s really dangerous,” said Forbes.

“The way the government did this has undermined the very public health message that we are all trying to unite around. It’s deeply unhelpful.”

He added: “Part of the problem is there are now so many filters people get their news and informatio­n from that it’s difficult to separate out messages circulatin­g on social media from messages coming from establishe­d, credible media sources.”

Forbes said conspiracy theories “that sound remotely plausible are quoted back at me on a more or less daily basis by people I would consider to be normal friends and neighbours … For example, somebody thought this is all part of the council’s grand plan to abolish alcohol in the city.”

He said of the suggestion that the curfew was to appease Muslims: “It’s completely ridiculous. But you can see how in the absence of clarity and the uncertaint­y of what this means for pubs and so on, why that could be seen as a half truth and promoted as such.”

Forbes said he had asked the government for a support package that would include money to pay for communicat­ing the rules, as well as compensati­on for affected businesses and for more testing. But so far none had been forthcomin­g.

One particular source of confusion is whether people in north-east England are allowed to meet friends in pub beer gardens, as long as they are in a group no larger than six.

The new regulation­s tell pub landlords they should “take steps to ensure that people do not socialise outside of their households inside and outside your premises”. Yet a few paragraphs later the operators are told they “must take reasonable steps to ensure … bookings are not accepted, or customers admitted on to the premises if groups include more than one household and support bubble, or more than six people if the group includes multiple households, if they will be located outdoors.”

The same document advises ( but does not compel) members of the public “to not to meet with people you do not live with, unless they’re in your support bubble, in any outdoor public venues”.

Forbes said his officers had studied the document and concluded it was “probably” still legal for groups of six people to meet in a pub garden – but not in their own gardens. “How on earth are the public meant to get their head around that?” he said. “So much of this is confusing and contradict­ory.”

The Guardian asked the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) to clarify what the rules were but had not received a response by the time of publicatio­n.

There were 705 new cases of Covid in Newcastle over the last seven days, up from 393 the week before. That gives the city an infection rate of 233 per 100,000 people, more than Bolton and far above the English average of 51.

 ??  ?? Nick Forbes pictured during an appearance on BBC News on Tuesday. Photograph: BBC News
Nick Forbes pictured during an appearance on BBC News on Tuesday. Photograph: BBC News

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