The Guardian (USA)

Health chiefs seek urgent answers on travel advice for England hotspots

- Damien Gayle and Josh Halliday

Public health chiefs are demanding urgent answers about why the government failed to announce new travel advice urging millions of people not to travel into or out of Covid hotspots.

As news spread of the guidance on Tuesday, four days after it was quietly published on a government website, Dominic Harrison, the director of public health for Blackburn with Darwen council, said local councils had still had no notificati­on from Westminste­r about it.

Harrison said he was “astonished” that public health chiefs had not been told about the latest advice, which affects millions of people, and that it was “very difficult” to support the advice without seeing the government’s risk assessment.

He added: “This advice has massive implicatio­ns for school trips, for hospitalit­y, for people playing football matches, for footfall for small businesses, and for the economic recovery for town centres. The fact that the government’s just announced it without consultati­on or evidence is astonishin­g.

“It does reflect the fact that in relation to our management of surges in areas that have variants, we simply have no strategy at the moment. What we seem to be subject to is random policy announceme­nts.”

The Labour leader, Keir Starmer, said it was “utterly shameful” that the government had made such a “major change” without telling local leaders. He said: “The government needs to provide clarity, fast. Local lockdowns are the wrong approach for both public health and local economies.”

Wendy Burke, North Tyneside’s director of public health, said there had been no indication of any additional restrictio­ns when an announceme­nt about extra testing was made last week.

According to the guidance, which appears to have been updated on 21 May and is not law, journeys to and

from the affected areas – Bedford, Blackburn and Darwen, Bolton, Burnley, Kirklees, Leicester, Hounslow, and North Tyneside – should be avoided “unless essential”. Exemptions include travel for work, where working from home is not possible, and education.

The guidance affects not only the 1.97 million people in the eight areas but also the millions of people who enter and leave those boroughs every day to go to work, school or for leisure.

The update did not seem to have been accompanie­d by an official announceme­nt. On Tuesday, Harrison and Burke confirmed local public health directors were unaware of it.

One public health official pointed out that Simon Stevens, the NHS England chief executive, travelled to Bolton on Friday to visit a vaccinatio­n site. It is not clear whether he knew about the guidance although his trip may constitute “essential” travel.

Jamie Driscoll, the North of Tyne metro mayor, said nobody from central government had told his officials of the travel guidance. He said he would be speaking to ministers later on Tuesday “to get to the bottom of it”.

Another public health official, whose council borders one of the eight listed authoritie­s, said she first heard the news on BBC Radio 4 on Tuesday morning – shortly after unwittingl­y breaching the advice by travelling into the neighbouri­ng area for exercise. “It’s just really silly,” she said.

Burke was quoted by the PA Media news agency as saying: “Last Wednesday it was announced in parliament that North Tyneside, along with five other areas in England, would be subject to enhanced testing and vaccinatio­ns.

“When the announceme­nt was made there was no indication it would come with any additional restrictio­ns for North Tyneside or the other areas. We understand that, later, government guidance around travel in and out of North Tyneside was posted on the government website.

“This has not been accompanie­d by any communicat­ion to the local authority, local residents or businesses. We have already queried this with the Department of Health and Social Care to seek clarificat­ion.

“We will continue to work with government on our enhanced testing and vaccinatio­n plan which is now in place.”

Yasmin Qureshi, MP for Bolton South East, tweeted it was “beyond insulting” that her office learned Bolton had been placed in a “quasi-lockdown state” from a local journalist.

“We received no official correspond­ence of this change from the UK Govt,” she said.

The areas subject to the new advice are those where the coronaviru­s variant first identified in India, known as B.1.617.2, is believed to be spreading fastest. As well as asking people not to travel in and out, the new guidance also recommends keeping meetings with others outdoors “where possible” and maintainin­g social distancing of two metres between people who do not live together.

Asked about the apparent confusion on Tuesday morning, Thérèse Coffey, the work and pensions secretary, insisted the government had already been working with local areas where the B.1.617.2 variant was spreading fastest.

“This guidance was simply put out at the same time as the risk was identified and effectivel­y notified of the increased caution which people should take,” Coffey told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“It’s just putting something on the record alongside that encouragin­g communitie­s to take what had already been communicat­ed about some of the extra precaution­s people should be mindful of in trying to stop the transmissi­on of coronaviru­s.”

 ??  ?? A mobile vaccinatio­n clinic in Little Harwood, Blackburn, one of the areas affected by the new advice on Covid hotspots. Photograph: Christophe­r Furlong/Getty Images
A mobile vaccinatio­n clinic in Little Harwood, Blackburn, one of the areas affected by the new advice on Covid hotspots. Photograph: Christophe­r Furlong/Getty Images

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