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Covid-19: London lockdown likely under UK’s virus containment plan

ByBloomberg | Posted by Saumya Sharma
Aug 04, 2020 10:24 AM IST

The Contain Strategy says ministers can use public health laws passed in 1984 to close businesses and venues, impose restrictions on the movement of people, prevent overnight stays away from home, limit the size of gatherings, and shut down local and national transport systems.

The UK’s plans to block further spikes in coronavirus allow for ministers to lock down London, Boris Johnson’s spokesman said, as officials prepare for a resurgence of Covid-19 in the months ahead.

The Contain Strategy was unveiled last month. (Representational Image)(Unsplash)
The Contain Strategy was unveiled last month. (Representational Image)(Unsplash)

The so-called Contain Strategy, unveiled last month, “does set out the possibility of a power to restrict people’s movement and potentially close down local transport networks,” Prime Minister’s Spokesman James Slack told reporters on Monday when asked whether the government had war-gamed sealing off the capital.

His remarks followed a report in the Sunday Times newspaper that ministers could curb travel in and out of the M25 highway encircling London and ban overnight stays in the city if there’s a surge in cases.

With cases of coronavirus ticking upwards again, Johnson is caught between the competing goals of suppressing the spread of the disease and re-opening the economy by getting people back to work. Last week ministers told more than 4 million people in Northern England they should no longer socialize in each other’s homes and postponed the reopening of leisure businesses including casinos, bowling alleys and ice rinks.

The strategy says ministers can use public health laws passed in 1984 to close businesses and venues, impose restrictions on the movement of people, prevent overnight stays away from home, limit the size of gatherings, and shut down local and national transport systems.

Back to Work?

At the same time, Johnson is pushing ahead with efforts to revive the stalled U.K. economy, which is facing a potentially devastating recession. He has revised guidance that people should work from home where possible, giving employers more discretion to recall their workers.

A British Chambers of Commerce survey conducted last month, just before the prime minister urged workers to return to their offices, showed 62% of businesses expect all or some of their employees to be working remotely for the next year. BCC Director General Adam Marshall said public confidence may be a more important factor than government guidance in the return of workers to their offices.

“A wholesale return to offices in some of the U.K.’s biggest cities is unlikely over the coming months,” Marshall said on Monday. “Businesses and their employees, not the government, will decide the pace of return to the workplace. Many firms will choose to move when public confidence rises, not when official guidance changes.”

Marshall said remote and flexible working are likely to become permanent features of business life and concerns about the safety of public transport risk creating a “two-speed recovery” with towns and suburbs returning to normal activity and footfall before city centers.

Eating Out

The government’s push to get people back into workplaces follows concerns that city-center businesses such as sandwich shops and other retailers will struggle to survive without the officer workers who use them.

On Monday, a month-long government program to encourage people to return to restaurants began. The so-called Eat Out to Help Out program gives diners a 50% discount, worth as much as 10 pounds ($13) per person, on meals they eat in restaurants from Monday to Wednesday throughout August.

More than 72,000 eating establishments, including branches of Pizza Express, Costa Coffee and Nando’s, have signed up to the program, the Treasury said on Monday. It estimates the plan will cost the government 500 million pounds.

The UK Hospitality trade body, which represents restaurants, said 84% of businesses in the sector intended to take part in the Eat Out to Help Out initiative.

(This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.)

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