PM announces easing of lockdown restrictions
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has today (Tuesday 23 June) set out
further changes to lockdown measures in England to enable people to
see more of their friends and family, help businesses get back on
their feet and get people back in their jobs. From Saturday
4th July, the Prime Minister has announced that pubs,
restaurants and hairdressers will be able to reopen, providing they
adhere to COVID Secure guidelines. From the same date,
he has set out...Request free trial
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has today (Tuesday 23 June) set
out further changes to lockdown measures in England to enable
people to see more of their friends and family, help businesses get
back on their feet and get people back in their jobs.
From Saturday 4th July, the Prime Minister has announced
that pubs, restaurants and hairdressers will be able to reopen,
providing they adhere to COVID Secure guidelines.
From the same date, he has set out that two households will be
able to meet up in any setting with social distancing measures,
and that people can now enjoy staycations in England with the
reopening of accommodation sites.
In order to begin restoring the arts and cultural sector, some
leisure facilities and tourist attractions may also reopen, if
they can do so safely – this includes outdoor gyms and
playgrounds, cinemas, museums, galleries, theme parks and
arcades, as well as libraries, social clubs, places of worship
and community centres.
Following a review, the Prime Minister has also set out that
where it is not possible to stay two metres apart, guidance will
allow people to keep a social distance of ‘one metre
plus’. This means staying one metre apart, plus mitigations
which reduce the risk of transmission.
As we begin to reopen the economy, it’s important that we do not
increase the risk of transmission which is why “close proximity”
venues such as nightclubs, soft-play areas, indoor gyms, swimming
pools, water parks, bowling alleys and spas will need to remain
closed for now. The Government is continuing to work with these
sectors to establish taskforces to help them to become COVID
Secure and reopen as soon as possible.
While the infection rate continues to fall, the Prime Minister
has been clear that the public must continue to follow social
distancing guidelines to keep coronavirus under control. The
Government will keep all measures under constant review and will
not hesitate to apply the handbrake, or reverse measures, should
the virus begin to run out of control.
These changes apply in England only.
ENDS
PRIME MINISTER STATEMENT TO THE HOUSE
ON COVID-19
Mr Speaker, before I begin, I am sure the whole House will join
me in sending our deepest condolences to the families and friends
of
James Furlong, Joe Ritchie-Bennett and David Wails,
who were brutally killed in Reading on Saturday.
To assault defenceless people in a park is not simply an
act of wickedness but abject cowardice,
and we will never yield to those who would seek to destroy
our way of life.
Mr Speaker, with permission I will update the House
on the next steps in our plan to rebuild our economy and reopen
our society,
while waging our struggle against Covid-19.
From the outset, we have trusted in the common sense
and perseverance of the British people
and their response has more than justified our faith.
Since I set out our plan on the 11th May,
we have been clear that our cautious relaxation of the
guidance is entirely conditional on our continued defeat of the
virus.
In the first half of May, nearly 69,000 people tested
positive for Covid-19 across the UK;
by the first half of June, that total had fallen by nearly
70 percent to just under 22,000.
The number of new infections is now declining by between 2
and 4 percent every day.
Four weeks ago, an average of 1 in 400 people in the
community in England had COVID-19;
in the first half of June, this figure was 1 in
1,700.
We created a human shield around the NHS and in turn our
doctors and nurses have protected us,
and together we have saved our hospitals from being
overwhelmed.
On the 11th May, 1,073 people were admitted to
hospital in England, Wales and Northern Ireland with Covid-19,
by 20th June, this had fallen by 74 per cent to
283.
This pandemic has inflicted permanent scars and we mourn
everyone we have lost.
Measured by a seven-day rolling average, the number
of daily deaths peaked at 943 on the 14th April,
on 11th May it was 476,
and yesterday, the rolling average stood at 130.
We have ordered over 2.2 billion items of protective
equipment from UK based manufacturers, many of whose production
lines have been called into being to serve this new demand
-
and yesterday, we conducted or posted 139,659 tests,
bringing the total to over 8 million.
And while we remain vigilant, we do not believe
there is currently a risk of a second peak of infections that
might overwhelm the NHS.
Taking everything together, we continue to meet our five tests
and the Chief Medical Officers of all four home
nations have downgraded the UK’s Covid Alert Level from four to
three,
meaning that we no longer face a virus spreading
exponentially,
though it remains in general circulation.
The administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern
Ireland hold responsibility for their own lockdown restrictions
and they will respond to the united view of the
Chief Medical Officers at their own pace, based on their own
judgment,
but all parts of the UK are now travelling in the
same direction and we will continue to work together to ensure
that everyone in our country gets the support they need.
Thanks to our progress, we can now go further and
safely ease the lockdown in England.
At every stage, caution will remain our watchword, and
each step will be conditional and reversible.
Mr Speaker, given the significant fall in the prevalence
of the virus, we can change the two-metre social distancing rule,
from 4th July.
I know this rule effectively makes life impossible
for large parts of our economy, even without other restrictions.
For example, it prevents all but a fraction of our
hospitality industry from operating.
So that is why almost two weeks ago, I asked our experts
to conduct a review and I will place a summary of their
conclusions in the libraries of both Houses this week.
Where it is possible to keep 2 metres apart
people should.
But where it is not, we will advise people to keep a
social distance of ‘one metre plus’,
meaning they should remain one metre apart,
while taking mitigations to reduce the risk of transmission.
We are today publishing guidance on how businesses
can reduce the risk by taking certain steps to protect workers
and customers.
These include, for instance, avoiding face-to-face
seating by changing office layouts,
reducing the number of people in enclosed spaces,
improving ventilation,
using protective screens and face coverings,
closing non-essential social spaces,
providing hand sanitiser
and changing shift patterns so that staff work in set
teams.
And of course, we already mandate face coverings on public
transport.
Whilst the experts cannot give a precise assessment
of how much the risk is reduced,
they judge these mitigations would make “1 metre
plus” broadly equivalent to the risk at 2 metres if those
mitigations are fully implemented.
Either will be acceptable and our guidance will
change accordingly.
This vital change enables the next stage of our plan
to ease the lockdown.
Mr Speaker, I am acutely conscious people will
ask legitimate questions about why certain activities are allowed
and others are not.
I must ask the House to understand that the
virus has no interest in these debates.
Its only interest, its only ambition is to
exploit any opportunities is to recapture ground that we might
carelessly vacate.
There is one certainty: the fewer social
contacts you have, the safer you will be.
My duty, our duty as the Government, is to guide the
British people, balancing our overriding aim of controlling the
virus against our natural desire to bring back normal life.
We cannot lift all the restrictions at once, so we
have to make difficult judgments,
and every step is scrupulously weighed against the
evidence.
Our principle is to trust the British public to use their
common sense in the full knowledge of the risks,
remembering that the more we open up, the more
vigilant we will need to be.
From now on we will ask people to follow guidance on
social contact instead of legislation.
In that spirit we advise that from 4 July, two
households of any size should be able to meet in any setting
inside or out.
That does not mean they must always be the same two
households.
It will be possible for instance to meet one set of
grandparents one weekend, and the others the following weekend.
We are not recommending meetings of multiple
households indoors because of the risk of creating greater chains
of transmission.
Outside, the guidance remains that people from
several households can meet in groups of up to six.
and it follows that two households can also meet,
regardless of size.
Mr Speaker, I can tell the House that we will
also re-open restaurants and pubs.
All hospitality indoors will be limited to
table-service, and our guidance will encourage minimal staff and
customer contact.
We will ask businesses to help NHS Test and Trace
respond to any local outbreaks
by collecting contact details from customers, as
happens in other countries,
and we will work with the sector to make this
manageable.
Almost as eagerly awaited as a pint will be a
haircut, particularly by me,
and so we will re-open hairdressers, with
appropriate precautions, including the use of visors.
We also intend to allow some other close contact
services, such as nail bars, to re-open as soon as we can, when
we are confident they can operate in a Covid-secure way.
From 4th July, provided that no more than two
households stay together,
people will be free to stay overnight in
self-contained accommodation,
including hotels and bed & breakfasts,
as well as campsites as long as shared facilities
are kept clean.
Most leisure facilities and tourist attractions will
reopen if they can do so safely,
including outdoor gyms and playgrounds, cinemas,
museums, galleries, theme parks and arcades
as well as libraries, social clubs and community
centres.
“Close proximity” venues such as nightclubs,
soft-play areas, indoor gyms, swimming pools and spas will need
to remain closed for now, as will bowling alleys and water parks.
But my RHFs the Business and Culture
Secretaries will establish taskforces with public health experts
and these sectors to help them become Covid-secure and re-open as
soon as possible.
We will also work with the arts industry on
specific guidance to enable choirs, orchestras and theatres to
resume live performances as soon as possible.
Recreation and sport will be allowed, but indoor
facilities, including changing rooms and courts, will remain
closed
and people should only play close contact team
sports with members of their household.
Mr Speaker, I know that many have mourned the
closure of places of worship,
and this year, Easter, Passover and Eid all occurred
during the lockdown.
So I am delighted that places of worship will
be able to reopen for prayer and services –
including weddings with a maximum of 30 people,
all subject to social distancing.
Meanwhile, our courts, probation services, police
stations and other public services will increasingly resume
face-to-face proceedings.
Wrap-around care for school age children and formal
childcare will restart over the summer.
Primary and secondary education will recommence in
September with full attendance
and those children who can already go to
school should do so – because it is safe.
Mr Speaker, we will publish Covid-secure guidelines for
every sector that is re-opening,
and slowly but surely, these measures will restore a sense
of normality.
After the toughest restrictions in peacetime history,
we are now able to make life easier for people to see more
of their friends and families
and to help businesses get back on their feet and
get people back into work.
But the virus has not gone away.
We will continue to monitor the data with the
Joint Biosecurity Centre and our ever more effective Test and
Trace system.
And I must be clear to the House, that as we have
seen in other countries,
there will be flare-ups for which local measures
will be needed
and we will not hesitate to apply the brakes and
re-introduce restrictions even at national level - if
required.
So I urge everyone to stay alert, control the virus
and save lives.
Let’s keep washing our hands,
staying 2 metres apart wherever feasible, and
mitigating the risks at 1 metre where not,
avoiding public transport when possible, and wearing a
mask when not,
getting tested immediately if we have symptoms,
and self-isolating if instructed by NHS Test and Trace.
Today, we can say that our long national hibernation is beginning
to come to an end
and life is returning to our shops, streets and homes
and a new, but cautious, optimism is palpable.
But it would be all too easy for that frost to
return
and that is why we will continue to trust in the common sense and
the community spirit of the British people to follow this
guidance,
to carry us through and see us to victory over this
virus.
I commend Mr Speaker this Statement to the House.
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