Prime Minister Scott Morrison has outlined Australia’s “road out” of coronavirus lockdowns – and given the first official hint of a timeline for relaxing restrictions.
Speaking in Canberra after a meeting of the national cabinet on Thursday, Mr Morrison said broader testing for the virus, better tracing of infected people’s contacts and effective responses to shutting down local outbreaks were key to easing restrictions.
The national cabinet has agreed to spend the next four weeks focusing on those issues. “Baseline restrictions” on movement, businesses and social-distancing for individuals will remain at least until then.
“We still have a difficult road ahead of us at this point, despite the successes that Australians have achieved,” Mr Morrison said.
“The more we keep it under control, the more we all enlist in the sorts of things we need to do to help those who are tracing the virus and identifying it and reacting to it if there are outbreaks, the more we might be able to at some point turn to easing those restrictions.”
Mr Morrison’s announcement came after another day of positive infection numbers for Australia.
Chief medical officer Brendan Murphy said Australia had 6457 confirmed coronavirus cases on Thursday – a continuation of slowing growth he described as “very encouraging”.
Most new cases are still from returning overseas travellers.
Australia’s coronavirus death toll remained at 63, although there are 42 patients on ventilators in the country’s hospitals.
Schools still remain problematic, with the two most populous states split on their approach to whether students should attend or not. Victoria is sticking with its plan for remote learning during term two, while NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian has said she wants more “face-to-face contact for students” from mid-May.
Mr Morrison reiterated the official health advice that schools are safe for children. More protection needed to be considered for teachers, he said.
“Teachers are more at risk in the staffroom than they are in the classroom when it comes to how the health advice plays out and the impact of this virus on children as opposed to teachers,” he said.
“That means that we need to have proper arrangements in place for teachers, and other staff in schools obviously, to protect their work environment.”
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He also warned life after the coronavirus crisis would be “a different world”.
“Any sense of business as usual when it comes to the policy framework we had at the election will need to be reconsidered on the other side,” he said.
“On the other side of this virus and on the way out, we are going to have to have economic policy measures that are going to have to be very pro-growth, that is going to enable businesses to employ people, that will enable businesses to invest and businesses to move forward.
“Our government sees business at the centre of the economy. We do not see government as the centre of the economy.”
Professor Murphy said clusters of community transmission of COVID-19 remained of most concern to health authorities.
“If we relax the distancing measures that are stopping or reducing that community transmission, that will inevitably lead to some more outbreaks,” he said.
“We can’t afford to do relaxation until we have a public health system that is so finely tuned that it can detect and respond to any outbreak.”
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