North East lockdown: Curfew for bars and pubs and ban on household mixing begins

Politics

New local restrictions are being introduced in northeast England – including a 10pm curfew for bars and pubs and a ban on people mixing with others outside their household.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock confirmed the measures in a statement to the House of Commons on Thursday following government talks with North East councils and local MPs.

They will come into force from Friday in Northumberland, North Tyneside, South Tyneside, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Gateshead, Sunderland and County Durham.

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Customers sit with their drinks outside a re-opened pub in Newcastle, northern England on July 4, 2020, as restrictions are further eased during the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic. - Pubs in England reopen on Saturday for the first time since late March, bringing cheer to drinkers and the industry but fears of public disorder and fresh coronavirus cases. (Photo by Lindsey Parnaby / AFP) (Photo by LINDSEY PARNABY/AFP via Getty Images)
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Newcastle is among the areas where pubs will have to operate with a curfew

The restrictions will include:

  • Residents being told not to socialise with people outside their household or social bubble
  • Table service only in bars, pubs, cafes and restaurants
  • All bars, pubs, restaurants, cafes and other leisure and entertainment venues to close between 10pm and 5am

In a stark warning, Mr Hancock told MPs: “Like many other countries around the world, we’re continuing to see a concerning rise in cases with 3,991 new cases recorded yesterday.

“And this week the number of patients in mechanical ventilator beds has risen above 100 for the first time since July.

“The battle against coronavirus is not over.”

The health secretary said there had been “concerning rates of infection” in parts of the North East.

“We agree with the local councils that we must follow the data and act and the data says that we must act now so that we can control the virus and keep people safe,” he added.

“And I know that the people of the North East will come together to beat this virus, as defeat it we must.”

Mr Hancock also used his Commons statement to announce that the government is giving a further £2.7bn to the NHS ahead of this winter.

It will help hospitals operate “safely in a world in which COVID-19 is still at large” as they work through a backlog of operations delayed by the lockdown earlier this year, he told MPs.

The government will also continue to invest in making accident and emergency departments bigger so they “have the space to continue treating patients safely in the coming months”, Mr Hancock said.

Labour’s shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth accused the government of having “failed” to deliver an effective test and trace programme as millions more people prepare to live under localised restrictions in the UK.

“The British people made great sacrifices, they missed family celebrations, they couldn’t say their final goodbyes to loved ones at funerals but the British people honoured their side of the bargain,” he said.

“In return, the government was supposed to deliver effective testing and tracing.

“The government failed and we have vast swathes of the country under restrictions.”

Mr Hancock insisted testing capacity was at “record levels” but admitted there was a “challenge” being presented by demand for tests rising faster.

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Nick Forbes, leader of Newcastle City Council, earlier said his council had asked the government for “additional temporary restrictions” after becoming “very concerned about the exponential rise in the number of COVID-19 cases across the North East”.

He told Kay Burley: “Our evidence from contact tracing tells us it’s happening broadly in three main areas; in bars and pubs, in people’s homes, and in grassroots sports.

“So what we’ve done is try to get ahead of the curve and ask government for some additional temporary restrictions so that we can get on top of the virus in all of those areas.”

Explaining the reason for a 10pm curfew for bars, pubs and restaurants, Mr Forbes said: “One of the challenges has been groups of people meeting up in our towns and city centres very late at night – and after a few drinks that means social distancing goes out the window.

“So we want to ensure that isn’t another opportunity for the virus to keep spreading.”

Mr Forbes added that Newcastle City Council had asked for an exemption on informal childcare arrangements with extended family members.

According to Sky News data, the two-week coronavirus infection rate per 100,000 in the seven local authority areas facing new restrictions are:

  • Sunderland: 155.7
  • South Tyneside: 155.1
  • Gateshead: 139.7
  • Newcastle 116.3
  • North Tyneside: 85
  • County Durham: 70.2
  • Northumberland: 47.1

Kevan Jones, Labour MP for North Durham, criticised the government’s “farcical” handling of rising infection rates in northeast England – and described the testing programme in the region as a “shambles”.

On Thursday morning, health minister Edward Argar told Sky News: “In the North East we are seeing a spike in infections. It is exactly what we have seen in the North West.

“We monitor that rate. Where we need to, we step in and take action.”

Mr Argar said, in northwest England, the rise in infections was due to people not adhering to social distancing rules with different households meeting up in close proximity.

He added: “Obviously a night-time economy can fuel that when people have been to the pub, people have been out late into the evening.

“That’s one of the ways in which that transmission can increase.”

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