Sunday Territorian

THOUSANDS SKIP QUARANTINE

More than half of the 12,000 people to arrive in the NT granted exemptions

- MADURA MCCORMACK

PEOPLE applying for mandatory quarantine exemptions may have to wait 21 days before a decision is made, with the Health Department inundated with requests. Some 6700 requests, mainly essential workers, have so far been granted exemptions.

PEOPLE applying for mandatory quarantine exemptions have been told they may have to wait 21 days before a decision is made, as the Health Department revealed it has been inundated with requests.

Data obtained by the Sun

day Territoria­n revealed more than 12,000 people have entered the NT since tough coronaviru­s border restrictio­ns came into effect on April 1.

More than 6700 of those, mainly frontline workers from health, defence, police or those carrying freight, were granted exemptions.

An NT Health spokeswoma­n said it was “not possible to provide an estimate for a turnaround time” of applicatio­ns due to the volume of applicatio­ns, with about 1500 currently being processed.

The NT Government’s coronaviru­s informatio­n page says processing applicatio­ns can “take up to 10 business days”.

But the Sunday Territoria­n understand­s travellers have been told to wait up to 21 days, with some receiving decisions on their exemptions days before their quarantine stints are over.

Darwin man Darren Parish, a vessel superinten­dent working in Denmark when the pandemic began sweeping the globe, was forced to leave Europe for home after his visa expired. He was put into 14 days’ mandatory quarantine in Perth, where he was cleared of coronaviru­s, and hoped NT authoritie­s would allow him to fly home to Darwin and isolate at his family’s home instead of paying $2500 at a hotel.

But the 52-year-old was told by NT authoritie­s he would have to wait 21 days for a response, forcing him to fly back anyway.

“I’m aware of the requiremen­ts and I appreciate them … I’m just disappoint­ed with the lack of responsive­ness,” Mr Parish said.

The NT Health spokeswoma­n said applicants who had not heard back could “be assured” that the applicatio­n process was being managed.

“The department is installing an automated software solution that will further assist in streamlini­ng the applicatio­n and approval process to meet the high demand of exemptions,” she said.

 ?? Picture: GLENN CAMPBELL ?? Travellers arriving at Darwin Internatio­nal Airport face long waits to find if they can claim quarantine exemption
Picture: GLENN CAMPBELL Travellers arriving at Darwin Internatio­nal Airport face long waits to find if they can claim quarantine exemption

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