Sunday, 3 October 2021

COVID-19 State of Play in North-East NSW: Venues of Concern growing & a Sydney-centric vaccination myth annoys


 

Echo Net Daily, 2 October 2021:


The Northern NSW Local Health District has been notified of new venues of concern associated with confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the region.


NNSWLHD says that a anyone who attended the following venues at the times listed are considered a casual contact and must get tested and isolate until they get a negative result.

NNSWLHD Venues of Concern, Saturday October updated 9.18pm.













If you are directed to get tested for COVID-19 or self-isolate at any time, you must follow the rules given to you by Health staff, whether or not the venue or exposure setting is listed on the NSW Health website.


Echo NetDaily, 29 September 2021:


Byron’s vaccination coverage is 20 per cent below the rest of NSW and it needs to lift – quickly. Political and health leaders suggest ‘vaccine hesitancy’ as the problem, but the main issue has been vaccine supply. With thousands of Byron Shire adults not due to receive a first COVID vaccine dose until October, creative solutions – and a greater sense of urgency – are needed to get us ahead of what’s coming.


The recent Shire-wide lockdown resulted from just one Sydney traveller visiting a few Byron shops on her trip from Ballina Airport to Kingscliff. The travel was permitted, but the retail therapy was not. The traveller later tested positive for COVID, and within hours more than 100,000 of us were back in a snap seven-day lockdown.


The whiplash-inducing hard shift from ‘mostly-open’ to ‘mostly-closed’ is a regional NSW peculiarity designed to protect places like ours that have been largely COVID-free, but which also have below-average vaccination rates. Byron Shire has the second lowest first dose vaccination rate in NSW today – an extraordinary 20 per cent below the State average.


If you watched any of the daily COVID updates recently, Byron’s low vaccination rate – and what that means for the October statewide reopening plans and regional travel – is finally getting attention in Sydney. But there’s something a bit off. The questions lead with an assumption of why the vaccination rate is trailing; an assumption that respondents are too willing to reaffirm.


Take this example from 22 September:


Interviewer: ‘What’s the strategy to get the vaccination rate up in Byron Bay, Mullumbimby…?’


NSW Premier: ‘Well as I said, unfortunately there are pockets of resistance… And even if you don’t care about the safety of those around you… And even if you don’t care about your community, I think people are looking forward to doing things we haven’t been able to do for a while, and I think that’s a big incentive. But as we know there will always be pockets of resistance, but we are trying to identify those communities that legitimately have lower vaccination rates, it might be access issues… and as you know we have done incredibly well as a state considering the lumpiness of the supply we have received… it’s been a challenge for us to make sure it gets to the right places… I know there are some regional communities that are slightly behind the state average and we are trying to increase those as quickly as we can.’


Wow. That’s as unsubtle as it gets. Let me translate: There are a handful of places with legitimately low vaccination rates (problems the government is working hard to fix!), and then there are places like Byron where the rate is illegitimately low owing to the selfish (in)actions of some…..


Ballina man charged with 40 counts of sexually and indecently assaulting boys in Lismore area between 1960 and 1991


NSW Police, News, 30 September 2021:


A man will appear in court today charged over the alleged historical sexual abuse and indecent assault of seven children in the state’s north.


Last year, detectives from Richmond Police District established Strike Force Erldunda to investigate reports a man had been sexually and indecently assaulted as a child by a man who was known to him.


During the investigation, police identified a further six men who were allegedly sexually and indecently assaulted by the same man.


Following extensive inquiries, an 82-year-old man was arrested at a home in Ballina about 1.30pm yesterday (Wednesday 29 September 2021).


He was taken to Ballina Police Station and charged with 40 offences including 31 counts of indecent assault on male, four counts of indecent assault where victim under the age of 10 years and five counts of sexual intercourse with person under the age of 10 years.


Police will allege in court that the man sexually and indecently assaulted the boys – then aged between five and 12 – on several occasions between 1960 and 1991 in the Lismore area, while performing duties as a scout volunteer and a boys’ brigade volunteer.


The man was refused bail and is due to appear at Lismore Local Court today (Thursday 30 September 2021).


Investigations under Strike Force Erldunda are ongoing.

Saturday, 2 October 2021

Covid-19 infection & public health order update for north-east New South Wales, 2 October 2021



NSW Health-NNSWLHD, media releases, 2 October 2021:


Northern NSW Local Health District has been notified of 12 new cases of COVID-19.


Eight new cases were confirmed in residents of Northern NSW Local Health District to 8pm 1 October.


Six cases are from Lismore, one in Kyogle and one in Casino. All cases are linked to the Kyogle cluster.


A further four cases were confirmed overnight, three in the Tweed area and one in Kyogle. These four cases will be included in NSW Health’s official reporting tomorrow.


  The total number of active cases in Northern NSW is 26.


Northern NSW Local Health District has been notified of new venues of concern associated with confirmed cases.

Anyone who attended the following venues at the times listed is considered a casual contact and must get tested and isolate until they get a negative result.

  • Kyogle: Caltex, Summerland Way, Tuesday 28 September, 5:45pm to 6:00pm

  • Wollongbar : Wollongbar Tavern, 53 Simpson Avenue, Monday, 27 September, 5:25am to 8:00 am


If you are directed to get tested for COVID 19 or self-isolate at any time, you must follow the rules given to you by Health staff, whether or not the venue or exposure setting is listed on the NSW Health website.


Contact tracing and investigations are continuing, and information about new public exposure venues will be provided as soon as it is available.


Sewage surveillance has detected fragments of the COVID-19 virus in samples taken from the South Grafton sewage treatment plant on 30 September. This plant serves around 6,300 people. This is the fourth detection in the past 10 days in this area.


There are no known cases in the Grafton or Clarence Valley region, and we strongly urge residents and visitors to be vigilant for symptoms and please get tested as soon as they feel unwell. It’s important to isolate while waiting for your test result, and follow the instructions given to you by Health staff.


Sewage surveillance has also detected fragments of the virus in samples taken from the East and South Lismore sewage treatment plants on 29 September.


There are active cases in the areas served by these treatment plants, and we continue to encourage anyone in the Lismore area with even the mildest of symptoms to get tested.


Symptoms of COVID-19 can include a runny nose, scratchy or sore throat, cough, fever, shortness of breath, headache, tiredness, loss of taste or smell, nausea, diarrhoea or muscle aches.


Stay-at-home orders remain in place for Casino and Kyogle until 11 October due to an increased COVID-19 public health risk.


Everyone in these areas must stay at home unless it is for an essential reason, which includes shopping for food, medical care, getting vaccinated, compassionate needs, exercise and work or tertiary education if you can’t work or study at home.


There are more than 500 COVID-19 testing locations across NSW. Find a clinic at: https://www.nsw.gov.au/covid-19/health-and-wellbeing/clinics or contact your GP.


We encourage our community to get vaccinated against COVID-19 as soon as they are able to. Find available bookings at the Commonwealth Government’s COVID-19 Vaccine Clinic Finder: https://www.health.gov.au/.../covid-19-vaccine-clinic-finder (previously eligibility checker), or you can also call Health Direct on 1800 571 155 for assistance to book.


Cartoon of the Week


Cathy Wilcox



Friday, 1 October 2021

Fifty-one year-old Gladys Berejiklian resigns as NSW Premier & Liberal MLA for Willoughby on 1 October 2021 - around 18 months short of the end of her second term in office


Gladys Berejiklian, 1 October 2021
IMAGE: Daily Mail Australia










At approximately 1.13pm on 1 October 2021 Gladys Berejiklian resigned during her second term as NSW Premier and in her 19th year as Liberal MLA for the Sydney electorate of Willoughby.


In one stroke she has walked away from the ongoing disaster of her gross mismanagement of the NSW public health response to the SARS-CoV-2 Delta Variant Outbreak and, by leaving politics completely, has to some measure inoculated herself against any potentially negative findings of a NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption public inquiry.


NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC), MediaCentre, 1 October 2021:


Further Operation Keppel public inquiry

Friday 1 October 2021


The NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) will hold a further public inquiry in Operation Keppel from 10:00 am on Monday 18 October 2021.


The Commission is investigating whether, between 2012 and 2018, the Hon Gladys Berejiklian MP engaged in conduct that:


  • constituted or involved a breach of public trust by exercising public functions in circumstances where she was in a position of conflict between her public duties and her private interest as a person who was in a personal relationship with the then NSW Member of Parliament, Mr Daryl Maguire, in connection with: grant funding promised and/or awarded to the Australian Clay Target Association Inc in 2016/2017; and grant funding promised and/or awarded to the Riverina Conservatorium of Music in Wagga Wagga in 2018; and/or

  • constituted or involved the partial exercise of any of her official functions, in connection with: grant funding promised and/or awarded to the Australian Clay Target Association Inc in 2016/2017; grant funding promised and/or awarded to the Riverina Conservatorium of Music in Wagga Wagga in 2018; and/or

  • constituted or involved the dishonest or partial exercise of any of her official functions and/or a breach of public trust by refusing to exercise her duty pursuant to section 11 of the Independent Commission Against Corruption Act 1988 to report any matter that she suspected on reasonable grounds concerned or may concern corrupt conduct in relation to the conduct of Mr Daryl Maguire; and/or

  • was liable to allow or encourage the occurrence of corrupt conduct by Mr Maguire.


The Commission is also investigating whether, between 2012 and August 2018, Mr Maguire engaged in conduct that involved a breach of public trust by using his public office, involving his duties as a member of the NSW Parliament, and the use of parliamentary resources, to improperly gain a benefit for himself, G8wayInternational/G8wayInternational Pty Ltd and associated persons.


The general scope and purpose of the public inquiry is to gather evidence relevant to the matters being investigated for the purpose of determining the matters referred to in section 13(2) of the ICAC Act.


The Commission has decided that public inquiries will be conducted, as far as practicable, remotely via audio visual link (AVL) until there is a change in the current COVID-19 public health orders. Only those whose presence on Commission premises is deemed essential for the effective conduct of the public inquiry will be permitted on-site. Members of the public and the media will therefore not be permitted to attend the premises for the course of the Operation Keppel public inquiry. There is further information in the public inquiry protocol on the Commission’s website.


MS Teams is the AVL technology that the Commission will use to conduct the public inquiry remotely. The Commission will live stream the MS Teams proceedings via its website, www.icac.nsw.gov.au. The Commission will also upload exhibits (provided they are not subject to non-publication orders), transcripts and witness lists to the website. Updates will be provided throughout the course of the inquiry via the ICAC Twitter account (@nswicac).


Assistant Commissioner the Hon Ruth McColl AO SC will preside at the public inquiry. Counsel Assisting the Commission will be Mr Scott Robertson and Mr Alex Brown.


It is expected that the inquiry will continue for approximately 10 days. A witness list for the first week of the public inquiry will be published closer to the commencement date of the proceedings, along with further information about how to access the live stream. The Commission will also advise if there are changes to the public health orders that may affect the conduct of the inquiry.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5AT9kLQNOE8



This is the condition in which Gladys Berejiklian has left the state and the north-east New South Wales region.....



 

With the 2020-21 national budget deficit now standing at $134.2 billion Morrison & Frydenberg wield the financial razor – and it’s no surprise that COVID-19 support payments are first in line to be trimmed

 

The Final Budget Outcome 2020–21 was released on 30 September 2021 showing a general government sector 2020-21 budget underlying cash balance deficit of $134.2 billion and a net public debt of $592.2 billion which is 6.5% of Australia’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the last financial year.




Given that Morrison & Co are positioning the Coalition for a second ‘presidential style’ federal election the immediate reaction was to fall back on a favourite Scott Morrison tactic as Treasurer and then Prime Minister – impose support payment cuts that would impact most heavily on low income individuals and households.


Australian Treasurer & Liberal MP for Kooyong Josh Frydenberg, media release, 29 September 2021:


COVID-19 Disaster Payment


Joint media release with

Senator the Hon Bridget McKenzie

Minister for Emergency Management and National Recovery and Resilience

Minister for Regionalisation, Regional Communications and Regional Education


The temporary COVID-19 Disaster Payment has supported around 2 million Australians with over $9 billion in payments made since it was announced in June this year.


Under the payment, eligible recipients have received $750 per week if they lost over 20 hours of work, $450 per week if they lost between 8 and 20 hours and $200 per week for those on income support payments who lost over 8 hours of work.


As part of our economic recovery plan, the temporary payment will begin to transition once a state or territory reaches 70 per cent full vaccination of its population (16 years and older) in line with the movement into Phase B of the National Plan agreed to at National Cabinet.


Once a state or territory reaches 70 per cent full vaccination, the automatic renewal of the temporary payment will end and individuals will have to reapply each week that a Commonwealth Hotspot remains in place to confirm their eligibility.


In line with the movement into Phase C of the National Plan, where a Commonwealth Hotspot remains in place and a state or territory reaches 80 per cent full vaccination of its population (16 years and older), the temporary payment will step down over a period of two weeks before ending.


In the first week after a state or territory has reached 80 per cent vaccination there will be a flat payment of $450 for those who have lost more than 8 hours of work, while those on income support will receive $100.


In the second week, the payment will be bought into line with JobSeeker at $320 for the week for those who have lost more than 8 hours of work, while the payment will end for those on income support.


For those who haven’t already returned to the workforce following the end of the temporary payment as the economy opens up, the social security system will support eligible individuals back into work.


The Government will also leave in place the Pandemic Leave Disaster Payment until 30 June 2022.


Since the start of the pandemic the Morrison Government has provided $291 billion in direct economic support to households and businesses. [my yellow highlighting]


Note

The Pandemic Leave Disaster Payment program provides financial support if you can't earn an income because you must self-isolate or quarantine, or are caring for someone with COVID-19.


In NSW 18 regional local government areas & one town have their stay-at-home public health order extended to 11 October 2021 and another regional LGA along with another town are under stay-at-home orders for seven days

 

Last time I looked there were 128 local government & 1 unincorporated area within New South Wales.


On Sunday 11 September 2021 regional residents woke to the realisation that all but 38 of the 87 regional local government areas (or 44% of all regional councils) came out of the state-wide COVID-19 lockdown.


However since then the Delta Variant Outbreak has continued playing a game of musical chairs with regional councils, as infected people from towns in metropolitan areas travelled into the regions seeding as they went.


So now, 20 days since the blanket regional lockdown ceased, due to the current presence of COVID-19 infections 22% of all regional local government areas are fully covered by stay-at-home orders and one regional council has two of its towns covered by these particular orders. In addition to this, COVID-19 fragments are regularly turning up in the state's 100km wide coastal strip, indicating that the virus still remains quite mobile.


Come 11 October in ten days time, when that merry little band of Glad, Brad, John & Scotty push to begin opening up NSW, there is no way every regional local government area will have 70% of their resident population fully vaccinated. As of 26 September 2021 absolutely none had reached that 70% fully vaccinated 'eligible' population target nor is there any guarantee that the virus transmission rate will be low enough in metropolitan areas to avoid a surge in active case numbers.


It doesn't take a crystal ball to predict that by the end of October the Delta Variant of SARS-CoV-2 may be lighting up more regional areas.


NSW Health, media release 2021:


Changes to stay-at-home orders for regional NSW local government areas


Stay-at-home orders will be extended until 11 October for a number of local government areas (LGAs) in regional NSW due to the ongoing COVID-19 public health risk.


Stay-at-home orders will be extended for the following LGAs until 11 October: Bathurst Regional, Bourke, City of Broken Hill, Central Coast, City of Cessnock, Dubbo Regional, Eurobodalla, Goulburn Mulwaree, Kiama, City of Lake Macquarie, City of Lithgow, City of Maitland, City of Newcastle, Port Stephens, Queanbeyan-Palerang Regional, City of Shellharbour, City of Shoalhaven, and Wingecarribee.


Due to recent transmission of COVID-19, stay-at-home orders will be introduced for the Snowy Monaro LGA from 3pm today (Thursday) for seven days. These stay-at-home orders also apply to anyone who has the Snowy Monaro LGA since 22 September.


Stay-at-home orders will be lifted, as scheduled, from tomorrow, Friday 1 October, for Mid-Western Regional, Hilltops and Walgett LGAs.


For the Central Darling Shire Council, stay-at-home orders will be lifted from tomorrow, with the exceptions of Wilcannia and Menindee. Stay-at-home orders will be extended in Menindee for a further seven days and in Wilcannia until 11 October.


NSW Health will continue to closely monitor the evolving situation with COVID-19 and will not hesitate to update its advice to protect the health and wellbeing of the people of NSW.


We urge people throughout NSW to continue to come forward for testing at the first sign of even mild symptoms. To find your nearest clinic visit COVID-19 clinics or contact your GP.


High vaccination rates are also essential to reduce the risk of transmission and protect the health and safety of the community.


Use the COVID-19 vaccine clinic finder to find your nearest vaccination clinic, or visit: Get your COVID-19 vaccination.