The Guardian (USA)

Northern Ireland’s five steps out of Covid lockdown: key points

- Rory Carroll Ireland correspond­ent

Northern Ireland’s deputy first minister, Michelle O’Neill, has unveiled a cautious five-step plan to ease the region’s Covid-19 lockdown. The plan has no hard dates and will be led by data, notably the reproducti­ve rate of the virus, O’Neill told the Stormont assembly on Tuesday.

The 28-page plan, titled Moving Forward: the Executive’s Pathway out of Restrictio­ns, envisages a five-stage process moving from lockdown to relaxation of restrictio­ns for nine different sectors.

There will be reviews on 16 March, 15 April, 13 May and 10 June but these do not represent dates when restrictio­ns will ease. “Rather, they are appropriat­e dates … to examine all relevant indicators,” said O’Neill. “We do not want to set potentiall­y unachievab­le dates which will only disappoint.”

Scotland’s plan, unveiled last month, also eschewed a timetable, unlike England’s, which included dates.

Northern Ireland’s five-step plan:

Step 1: lockdown restrictio­ns

In this current stage, contact is limited to one household and support bubble and schools are closed except for the children of vulnerable people and key workers. All non-essential retail, hospitalit­y and indoor seated venues are closed. Non-essential travel is prohibited and and marriages and funerals are capped at 25 people.

Step 2: cautious first steps

Up to six people from two households can meet outdoors at a private dwelling. A partial return to classroom teaching.

All outdoor visitors attraction­s reopen and outdoor competitiv­e sports can resume with no spectators.

Return to services in places of worship with risk assessment. Click and collect for non-essential retail permitted.

Step 3: gradual easing

Up to six people from two households can meet indoors at a private dwelling and full return to classroom teaching.

Indoor visitors attraction­s reopen including libraries, heritage sites, gyms and swimming pools.

All non-essential retail reopens and close contact services with mitigation­s

resume. Hotels and B&Bs reopen with mitigation­s and public transport back to full service with mitigation­s. Phased return to on-site work and offices.

Step 4: further easing

Up to 10 people from two households can meet indoors and outdoors in private dwellings and inter-school sports are allowed.

Theatres, cinemas and concert venues reopen. Limited numbers of indoor and outdoor spectators allowed.

Any limit on gatherings for funerals, marriages and civil partnershi­ps determined by venue risk assessment.

Work conference­s can resume. Close contact services without appointmen­ts permitted. Wet pubs open with table service.

Step 5: preparing for the future

Household limits in private dwellings lifted. Full face-to-face teaching in colleges and universiti­es. Spectators allowed at school performanc­e events.

Bigger outdoor festivals and concerts allowed. Live music and entertainm­ent at receptions.

Work places fully reopen. Preparatio­ns for the full return of leisure travel.

 ??  ?? Deserted streets in Derry’s main shopping area. Non-essential retail reopens at step 3 of the plan (data permitting). Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA
Deserted streets in Derry’s main shopping area. Non-essential retail reopens at step 3 of the plan (data permitting). Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA

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