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Australia news LIVE: NSW records 44 new cases of COVID-19 as Sydney restrictions tighten; Pfizer vaccine distribution brought forward

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What you need to know

Here’s a recap of the day so far if you’re just tuning in:

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The day’s headlines at a glance

That’s it for another week. Thanks for following along. Here’s a quick recap of the day:

There will be live blogs over the weekend. Goodnight.

Quiet Sydney streets on a wet, chilly Friday night.

Quiet Sydney streets on a wet, chilly Friday night.Credit: Wolter Peeters

A food delivery rider braves the wintry conditions in Surry Hills on Friday night.

A food delivery rider braves the wintry conditions in Surry Hills on Friday night.Credit: Wolter Peeters

See more images here.

Airlines given more detail on international arrival caps

By David Crowe

Airlines have been given more detail on the new caps on international arrivals to come into force by July 14 and last for the rest of the year.

The caps will be subject to a review in August that could adjust the numbers if national cabinet agrees to different settings from September.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison issued the details shortly before 6pm on Friday:

  • NSW – 1505 per week (215 per day);
  • Queensland – 650 per week (including surge capacity);
  • Victoria – 500 per week;
  • South Australia – 265 per week; and
  • Western Australian – 265 per week

Health Minister says bringing forward Pfizer doses will double August supply

Health Minister Greg Hunt says the number of doses of Pfizer vaccines in August will almost double after the government brought forward some doses.

“Instead of 2.4 million for August we’re looking at 4.5 million,” Mr Hunt told ABC’s Radio National program on Friday night. “What that means is more, earlier, better coverage.”

Mr Hunt said bringing forward the vaccines means there will be “not as much pressure in the last three months [of the year]”.

But he said the extra doses do not mean eligibility will open up for people aged under 40.

Mr Hunt said Sydneysiders were in the midst of a “tough” and “challenging” period and encouraged them to stay home and get tested if symptoms emerge.

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New venue alerts for Sydney

By Daniella White

There have been a significant number of new venue alerts added the state’s list of exposure sites this afternoon, mostly located in Sydney’s west. They come after NSW today recorded 44 new COVID-19 cases, with 19 of them out in the community while infectious.

Anyone who attended the following venues is a close contact and must immediately get tested and isolate for 14 days:

  • Burwood, Oporto, Westfield on Sunday from 1pm to 1.05pm
  • Tempe, IKEA on Tuesday from 10am to 9pm
  • Revesby, Terry White Chemmart on Tuesday from 8am to 3pm
  • Liverpool, Speed Medical Practice on Wednesday from 11.15am to 1.45pm
  • Homebush, Decode Group Construction Excavation site on Wednesday from 7am to 3pm
  • St Andrews, St Andrews Pharmacy on Wednesday from 8.30am to 3.30pm
  • Wetherill Park, Wetherill Park Medical Centre on Wednesday from 1.45pm to 2.30pm

Anyone who attended the following venues is a casual contact who must immediately get tested and isolate until a negative result is received:

  • Randwick, Bunnings on July 1 from 4.30pm to 5.30pm
  • Miranda, Service NSW on July 2 from 1.30pm to 2pm
  • Matraville, 7-Eleven on July 2 from 3.15pm to 4.45pm
  • Mt Druitt, Woolworths on Saturday from 5.15pm to 5.45pm
  • Kareela, Coles on July 2 from 5pm – 10pm and July 3 from 5pm to 10pm
  • Pagewood, Kmart, Westfield Eastgardens, on June 25 from 12.55pm to 1.15pm and July 3 from 4.20pm to 5pm
  • Taren Point, McDonalds on Sunday from 9.10am to 9.30am and Monday from 1.35pm to 1.55pm
  • Burwood, Westfield Burwood on Sunday from 11.50am to 1.10pm
  • Burwood, Kmart on Sunday from 11.50am to 12.35pm
  • Hoxton Park, Bunnings on Sunday from 4.25pm to 5pm
  • Campbelltown, 1825 Interiors on Sunday from 1.35pm to 1.50pm
  • Campbelltown, Johnny’s Furniture on Sunday from 1.55pm to 2.15pm
  • Campbelltown, Oz Design Furniture on Sunday from 2.15pm to 2.40pm
  • Campbelltown, Fair Price Furniture on Sunday from 2.40pm to 2.50pm
  • Campbelltown, Nick Scali Furniture on Sunday from 2.50pm to 3.20pm
  • Campbelltown, Harvey Norman on Sunday from 3.25pm to 3.50pm
  • Campbelltown, Nick Scali Clearance Outlet on Sunday from 3.50pm to 4.05pm
  • Mosman, BP Connect, Corner Avenue Road and Cowles Road on Sunday from 3.15pm to 3.35pm
  • Burwood, Evergreen Fresh World, Burwood Plaza on Sunday from 5pm to 5.15pm
  • Liverpool, Tong Li Supermarket on Monday from 12.55pm to 1.10pm
  • Maroubra, Maroubra Beach Pavilion Beachfront Cafe on Monday from 2.30pm to 2.45pm and Tuesday from 2.30pm – 2.45pm

You can see the full list on the NSW Health website.

What science says about mixing vaccines, and why countries using China’s vaccines are struggling

By Sherryn Groch

As we start winding down for the day, here are a couple of tasty explainers to sink your teeth into.

Young people make up half of the NSW cases: Why this outbreak is different

By Mary Ward and Natassia Chrysanthos

NSW has already recorded more COVID-19 cases in its latest outbreak than it did across the two months of the Avalon and Berala clusters over summer, and this time it is affecting young people at a much higher rate.

Our analysis of the first three weeks of the Bondi cluster against those in the Crossroads and Avalon and Berala outbreaks revealed children and people in their 20s and 30s made up more than half of recent infections.

But there is a sense of frustration among young people who are bearing the brunt of lockdown restrictions – and now case numbers – while being at the end of the queue to get vaccinated.

Georgia Rousselot, 25, with her three housemates as they work from home in a Redfern sharehouse.

Georgia Rousselot, 25, with her three housemates as they work from home in a Redfern sharehouse.Credit: Janie Barrett

Georgia Rousselot, 25, lives with three other women in an inner-city share house with one bathroom. All four have had to work side-by-side from the dining room. They’ve been holding themed dinner nights to boost their moods and fight off feelings of claustrophobia.

“But it’s been hard having to put life goals on hold and feel like it’s another year lost because of COVID and no hope of it ending, particularly when you are unsure if you can see your family or not,” Ms Rousselot said.

Read more here.

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Victoria softens travel restrictions for Queensland, WA, NT

By Ashleigh McMillan

Travellers will be able to enter Victoria from parts of Queensland, Northern Territory and Perth from Sunday without having to quarantine or get tested after changes to travel permits.

Brisbane, Moreton Bay and parts of the Sunshine Coast will become an “orange zone”, meaning travellers can return to Victoria from those areas but will need to stay isolated after arriving until they receive a negative COVID-19 test.

The following changes will take effect from 11.59pm Saturday:

  • Queensland: Townsville (including Magnetic Island), Palm Island, Ipswich, Logan, Redland, Gold Coast, Lockyer Valley, Noosa, Scenic Rim and Somerset will become “green zones”. Brisbane, Moreton Bay and parts of the Sunshine Coast will change from “red zones” to “orange zones”.
  • Western Australia: The Perth and Peel regions will move from “orange zones” to “green zones”, meaning all of Western Australia will become a “green zone”.
  • Northern Territory: Alice Springs and Greater Darwin will move from “orange zones” to “green zones”, uniting the whole territory as a “green zone”.

Green zone travellers still need to get a permit to enter Victoria.

All local government areas in Greater Sydney, including Central Coast, Blue Mountains, Shellharbour and Wollongong, remain “red zones” meaning non-residents can not enter without an exemption.

The ACT and regional NSW, including the areas inside the NSW cross-border community, remain “orange zones”.

Births up 50 per cent in some areas as Victorian baby boom surges on

By Michael Fowler

For much of last year, Victorians in lockdown had four permitted reasons to leave home. Or, in the eyes of many couples, one very good reason to stay home.

The number of babies born in Victoria has boomed over the past year, at an average of 5.7 per cent across the state but by as much as 50 per cent in some areas. Births have skyrocketed in particular in the regions, which make up seven of the top 10 baby boom areas.

‘He’s absolutely a COVID baby’: Hannah Martin gave birth to Soren in Melbourne two days ago.

‘He’s absolutely a COVID baby’: Hannah Martin gave birth to Soren in Melbourne two days ago.Credit: Luis Enrique Ascui

Melburnian Hannah Martin gave birth to her first child Soren two days ago. Was this timing always the plan or did the pandemic play a role?

“Oh, he’s absolutely a COVID baby. Yeah, no doubt. We just thought well, we’re going to be stuck here for a few years, not going overseas, the time’s right. But we’re very happy with the timing.”

Read more here.

ICU numbers rise in NSW

By Jenny Noyes

One development in the Sydney outbreak over the past few days is the number of people in ICU and on ventilators, including some under the ages we might expect to see in intensive care.

Today, there are 43 people in NSW hospitals with COVID-19, including seven under the age of 35.

Ten people are in intensive care, including four on ventilators. Of the 10 people in ICU, one is in their 20s, one is in their 30s, one is in their 50s, five in their 60s and two in their 70s.

While there’s one less person in ICU today than yesterday, there’s also one more person on a ventilator, with the total intubated growing to four since the first two were placed on ventilators on Tuesday.

Between June 22 and June 30, there were between zero and two people in ICU. Numbers in hospital with COVID-19 over the same period were below 10.

Yesterday, there were 11 people in the ICU (27 per cent of hospitalisations) including three on ventilators; on Wednesday it was seven (19 per cent) with two on ventilators and on Tuesday it was six (23 per cent) and two ventilated.

One thing to note is some positive cases were taken to hospital as a precaution, such as the Baulkham Hills aged care residents – most of whom were vaccinated.

We’ll keep track of these numbers which are likely to grow as the outbreak does.

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ACT tightens travel restrictions for Sydney

By Daniella White

The ACT has tightened its Sydney travel restrictions in light of the city’s growing COVID-19 outbreak.

From midnight tonight, anyone entering the territory who has been in Greater Sydney, the Blue Mountains, the Central Coast, Wollongong or Shellharbour will be subject to strict quarantine for 14 days.

Currently, people who are allowed to enter from Greater Sydney are subject to stay-at-home orders and are allowed to leave their homes for essential purposes.

But after midnight that will change meaning people entering from affected areas in NSW can only leave their homes in an emergency or for essential medical care. Other activities, such as leaving to work, study, buy food or exercise, will not be allowed.

People entering the ACT, including residents, must also complete an online exemption prior to their travel.

“Non-ACT residents continue to be unable to enter the ACT without an approved exemption,” a statement from ACT Health said.

“In light of the increased risk posed by the spread of COVID-19 in Greater Sydney, ACT exemptions will only be approved in highly exceptional circumstances.

“If people do not have suitable premises to quarantine in, they will be required to quarantine in a hotel at their own expense.”

The mask mandate will also be repealed at midnight.

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Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/national/australia-news-live-nsw-covid-19-cases-and-exposure-sites-continue-to-grow-police-descend-on-south-west-sydney-20210709-p5887x.html