The Independent

Councils in England given powers for local lockdowns

- ZOE TIDMAN

English councils were yesterday granted powers to impose local lockdown measures. Local authoritie­s will now be able to shut shops and cancel events to control coronaviru­s outbreaks.

Boris Johnson said councils in England would have the enhanced powers from yesterday, after he set out new details for “a significan­t return to normality” by Christmas.

The prime minister said: “They will be able to close specific premises, shut public outdoor spaces and cancel events. These powers will enable local authoritie­s to act more quickly in response to outbreaks where speed is paramount.”

Ministers will also be given extra powers, to be laid out in more detail this week, enabling them to close factories and sectors of the economy in certain regions and reintroduc­e bespoke stay-at-home orders.

So far, one city – Leicester – has seen stricter lockdown measures imposed following a spike in cases, while some individual premises, including a meat plant in West Yorkshire and hospital A&Es, have closed due to outbreaks.

James Jamieson from the Local Government Associatio­n (LGA), which represents local authoritie­s, said he hoped the new powers would make stricter measures across communitie­s less likely.

“Locally led responses have proven to be the best way to tackle significan­t outbreaks, which this framework rightly emphasises,” he said. “Councils know their local communitie­s best and know how to address each unique outbreak.”

He added: “Greater powers for councils to take swift and effective action to address local outbreaks will hopefully help avoid the need for more stringent measures to be imposed locally.”

Mr Jamieson added the use of enforcemen­t powers “should be an option of last resort” and called for more “granular-level data” to be made available to councils to allow them to be “better able to act in real time to increases in infection rates”.

Restrictio­ns in some parts of Leicester are set to be lifted to match the rest of the country from this weekend.

Areas outside Leicester and the borough of Oadby and Wigston saw lockdown eased slightly, so that nonessenti­al shops, hairdresse­rs and pubs were able to reopen yesterday.

However, measures will stay in place for the restricted zone. Health secretary Matt Hancock has said Covid-19 rates in the city remained too high to allow pubs and restaurant­s to open their doors.

 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? Still closed: the city centre of Leicester last week
(AFP/Getty) Still closed: the city centre of Leicester last week

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