The youngest children in Wales could begin returning to school
after the February half term, if rates of coronavirus continue
to fall, First Minister has announced today.
The First Minister confirmed the alert level four lockdown
restrictions will remain in place in Wales for the next three
weeks, following a review of the measures. He will also provide
more details of a £200m package to top-up support for
businesses.
Rates of coronavirus across Wales have fallen below 200 cases
per 100,000 people for the first time since early November. And
every day, thousands more people receive their first dose of
the Covid-19 vaccine – the latest figures show almost 11% of
the population have been vaccinated.
The return to primary school will be planned in a phased and
flexible way from 22 February, if the public health situation
continues to improve. Students studying vocational
qualifications will also be among those prioritised for the
phased return to colleges.
First Minister said:
“We are making steady progress in bringing coronavirus under
control once again. Every day, the vaccination programme is
speeding up as more people are vaccinated and more clinics
open. Each vaccine is another small victory against the
virus.
“We’ve seen a really welcome fall in cases of the virus all
over Wales, but they are still too high and the NHS continues
to be under intense pressure.
“We need to keep the lockdown restrictions in place for a
little while longer to help us bring rates of the virus down
further. If we can do this, we will create the headroom we
need to get children back to school after half term –
starting with the youngest at primary schools
“We will work with teachers, colleges, local authorities to
plan for the safe return of children to school over the next
couple of weeks and keep parents updated.”
Two small changes will be made to the current alert level four
restrictions:
- A maximum of two people from different households will be
able to exercise outdoors together, as long as they maintain
social distancing. This must involve exercise starting from and
finishing from home – driving for exercise to beauty spots
should still not take place.
- If a support bubble arrangement has broken down, a new one
can be formed as long as there is gap of 10 days before doing
so.
These changes will come into effect on Saturday 30 January
2021.
The First Minister added:
“I hope these two very small and cautious steps will be the
first towards a time when we can all live with fewer
restrictions on our lives and without fear of this terrible
virus.”
The further £200m support for non-essential retail,
hospitality, leisure and tourism businesses will help firms
with operational costs, and brings the package of business
support provided through the Economic Resilience Fund since
December to £650m.
Businesses with a rateable value of up to £500,000 will receive
support payments of between £3,000 and £5,000.
Economy Minister will provide further details later today.
In alert level four lockdown, everyone must:
- Stay at home.
- Work from home if they can.
- Keep a 2m distance from others.
- Wear a face covering in all indoor public places.
- Not meet anyone not in your immediate household or support
bubble.