With Jersey’s active Covid cases now reduced to 94, almost a third of Guernsey’s 277, ministers have agreed that non-essential retail can open as planned, this Wednesday 3rd February.
Ministers have agreed to move to the next stage of reconnection, by relaxing some of the existing Covid measures. The reopening of non-essential shops was delayed for a week when Covid cases were discovered in the retail supply chain. Since then, daily positive case numbers have remained low, and the cluster has been successfully contained.
Following a meeting of the Scientific and Technical Advisory Cell (STAC) earlier today, Ministers have decided to allow non-essential retail to reopen from Wednesday 3rd February. If the test positivity rate remains low, with continuing high levels of testing finding only small numbers of positive cases, close contact services like hairdressers and other beauty services will reopen a week later, on 10 February. These measures will remain in place for at least three weeks before any further relaxations are introduced.
The Chief Minister, Senator John Le Fondré, said: “We are grateful to the members of STAC for their invaluable research and advice, which is fundamental to our response to Covid. We have carefully considered their advice and the information they presented to us.
“It is clear that the measures we took before Christmas were necessary and have worked. Now that we are seeing a reduction in positive cases, and importantly a sustained reduction in the number of hospital patients with Covid-19, we have weighed up expert advice alongside the potential impact of the proposed measures on the community, and have decided that we can now move to stage 2 of our reconnection plan.
“We have decided to reopen non-essential retail from this Wednesday, and close-contact services a week later, to prevent a sudden increase in social contact and to remind islanders that we must continue to be careful to prevent the spread of the virus. We will look again, in three weeks’ time, at the options for further reconnection, including the easing of working from home measures, and the re-opening of some hospitality services.”
The Minister for Health and Social Services, Deputy Richard Renouf, said: “We are pleased to resume our gradual and considered reopening of lower-risk activities. We are moving in the right direction, but we still have some distance to go.
“Our vaccination programme is proceeding at pace, and we are on target to vaccinate all over-50s and high-risk Islanders by the end of March. The mobile unit completed 680 visits to Islanders in their homes last week, with another 400 planned for this week. From today anyone over the age of 70 can book their appointment, and we will be taking bookings from Islanders over the age of 65 later this month.
“We are taking every step as carefully as we can, as we want to fully understand the impact of each stage of reconnection. Waiting for three weeks before considering a move to the next stage will allow more time for sector communication and for any necessary legal processes to be conducted.
“We must continue to suppress community transmission and allow the vaccination programme to progress enough to protect the most vulnerable. Islanders should continue to respect physical distancing restrictions and avoid any mixing of households. By acting on case data, and by moving in stages, we can ensure the safest return to normality.”
Government guidance remains that people should not meet in each other’s homes or gardens but should meet outdoors, where two-metre distancing is easier.