Otago Daily Times

Masks: better late than never

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THE Government and New Zealand have been living the charmed life with Covid. We, at first, thought that suppressio­n would be the best policy. The peaks of infection and serious sickness would be levelled off and hospitals would not be overwhelme­d.

We then moved to the eliminatio­n strategy, a wise course for isolated islands that shut the borders and ensured satisfacto­ry compliance with the rules.

Once on that path, we were told repeatedly we were going hard and we were going fast. New Zealand was, indeed, firm in its regulation­s. Although outdoor exercise was allowed, retail was limited to supermarke­ts and pharmacies, and schools were shut. While we had the advantage of the first surge lagging behind much of the world, we did lockdown reasonably quickly.

But we also remember the mistakes, notably supposed testing of border staff that did not occur and the ease with which people escaped managed isolation in the first weeks.

Overall, neverthele­ss, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern was nononsense. The pleas from butchers, bakers and other food retailers were brushed aside in the effort to banish Covid. The ‘‘health’’ response was paramount.

As New Zealanders, we hand over the power of coercion in certain circumstan­ces to our Government. Freedoms were substantia­lly curtailed for the greater cause, for the public pandemic emergency.

However, as levels dropped, the Government has been hesitant to bring in suitable supportive measures. Sure, it was strong enough to order a second Auckland lockdown. It responded with alacrity to the latest outbreak and it has been implacable on border bubbles, despite the economic and social costs. It is estimated, for example, last week’s call for Auckland residents to stay away from the central city cost $10 million alone.

But the Government has been too slow to listen to the experts on certain matters which would not have been economical­ly costly. It is as if Ms Ardern, again, wants to try too hard to bring everyone with her rather than lead from the front.

The pleas to maskup and contactrec­ord obviously were being ignored by the public. Finally, after what is estimated to be eight border failures and several lucky escapes, masks will be mandated in some situations from today.

While the Government did not want to bring in rules that would be disregarde­d, people need the prompt and the push to maskup. Once momentum is created, once it becomes the norm, mask use will spread. Social pressure, instead of being on those standing out in their face coverings, will be on those without masks.

Initially, it makes sense for enforcemen­t to be lighthande­d. But, after a while New Zealanders will expect those noncomplyi­ng to face fines and sanctions.

The stakes are so high. Adelaide this week, and Melbourne earlier, have shown how quickly and insidiousl­y the virus can spread.

Mask use on public transport should be not just for Auckland. Other centres have isolation hotels, and ports remain another potential entry point. This is a mobile country, and an estimated 1900 Aucklander­s are in the Queenstown Marathon fields this weekend.

Carrying masks should be just what New Zealanders do. It is not just taxi drivers but also their passengers who should wear masks. Secondary students on buses should also be covered.

The Government, after the initial lockdown, has been too slow and too reactive. Improvemen­ts follow rather than precede issues arising.

A Government that claims to be informed by science could have done more under Alert Level 1.

Today marks a major step in the right direction. Additional mask rules, improved contact recording and refinement­s of isolation and quarantine policies and practices will further increase the odds of the essential eliminatio­n strategy succeeding.

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