The New Zealand Herald

PM under fire for decision delay

Opposition MPs want measures lifted, experts say now is not the time

- Michael Neilson

The Prime Minister is under fire over her decision to wait 48 hours before announcing decisions Cabinet has made around vaccine mandates, passes and the wider Covid-19 protection framework.

It comes after Health Minister Andrew Little’s admission that removing vaccine passes would not increase hospitalis­ations.

Opposition MPs say if the point of the restrictio­ns is to save the health system and they are no longer doing that, then they need to go as soon as possible.

However, experts say the peak of the Omicron outbreak is not the time to be relaxing restrictio­ns, and any changes should only come in once cases have stabilised.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said yesterday that Cabinet had signed off on decisions on vaccine mandates, certificat­es and the traffic light system.

She will outline them tomorrow, once a bit of further work is done. She said 48 hours were needed to finalise the advice and consider any knockon effects.

She said changes were not immediate, and the extra 48 hours would not make any difference to when the decisions took effect.

Act Party leader David Seymour said the delay showed the Government cared less about the public, who had been affected by the restrictio­ns, and more about podium time.

Earlier Little had told Today FM that if restrictio­ns were lifted now on vaccine mandates, passes, and gathering limits, hospitalis­ations would not increase.

“The whole point of the restrictio­ns was to save the health system,”

Seymour said. “If it’s no longer doing that then they should go.”

National’s Covid-19 spokesman Chris Bishop said if the evidence was there to remove mandates and vaccine passes, it should be announced as soon possible.

“The whole justificat­ion is to protect the health system and if data shows there is no risk any more they need to get rid of them as soon as possible.”

However, experts say any changes should only come in after cases and hospitalis­ations had plateaued — which was likely in a few weeks.

A blog post published by Otago University experts Professor Nick Wilson, Dr Jennifer Summers and Professor Michael Baker said while case numbers had likely peaked, caution was needed in relaxing restrictio­ns to avoid further waves, as had been seen in Australia.

Cases could stabilise at about 1000 cases a day but with about 200 to 300 people in hospital — still a huge strain on the system and any extra pressure needed to be avoided.

They called for more efforts to increase vaccinatio­n levels for children and booster coverage, with just 73 per cent of the eligible population boosted, and just 59 and 60 per cent respective­ly for Māori and Pasifika.

They also said mandates should be kept for certain industries interactin­g with vulnerable people and vaccine passes changed to include a booster dose, although their requiremen­t could be dropped for many settings and decisions left to businesses and individual­s.

While two doses and/or prior infection was shown to be effective at reducing transmissi­bility of Delta, it was less effective with Omicron.

Mask use should continue in key indoor settings and ventilatio­n improved where possible, they said.

The Green Party has urged the Government to listen to the experts and wait until “well after” the Omicron peak has passed before relaxing any measures.

Covid-19 response spokesman Teanau Tuiono said instead of discussing what Covid-19 protection measures to remove and when, Cabinet should be discussing how it can continue to protect those most at-risk.

“Not only to get through the current outbreak but to prepare for any new variants over winter.”

Meanwhile, another nine people died from Covid-19 yesterday, including a person in their 20s — the secondyoun­gest death in the pandemic.

The total number of publicly reported Covid-related deaths was now 184.

There were 14,463 new community cases of Covid-19 reported and 1000 people in hospital, including 33 in intensive care.

The seven-day rolling average of community cases is 17,124.

The Omicron wave continued to trend downwards, with experts saying the outbreak had peaked in Auckland, and likely also in other parts of the country.

 ?? Photo / Alex Robertson ?? Cabinet has signed off on decisions over vaccine mandates, passes and the traffic light system.
Photo / Alex Robertson Cabinet has signed off on decisions over vaccine mandates, passes and the traffic light system.
 ?? ?? Dr Jennifer Summers
Dr Jennifer Summers
 ?? ?? Professor Nick Wilson
Professor Nick Wilson

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