By RNZ.co.nz. Republished with permission.
The prime minister has announced Cabinet’s decision on changes to alert levels for Auckland, Northland and parts of Waikato.
The government will announce a new ‘Covid-19 protection framework’ on Friday for when the country is at a higher vaccination rate.
On Wednesday, Covid 19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins will provide up-to-date advice on schools reopening.
“We know that, in the future, we cannot ask people to live week by week not knowing when things will change,” Ardern says.
Ardern says it appears the people who travelled in Northland have not spread Covid-19 further.
Northland will move to level 2 at 11.59pm on 19 October.
For Waikato, “the situation is different”.
“While the cases remain broadly linked, this linking is often occurring after the positive results are being returned.”
Ardern says there is a need to act with caution in the Waikato after positive cases and wastewater testing came back positive.
Parts of Waikato in level 3 will remain there with a review on Friday.
For Auckland, Ardern acknowledges its been a long time to be living with restrictions.
“But those restrictions have made a huge difference, they’ve helped us to keep case numbers as low as possible while we continue to vaccinate people.
“We need to keep going with both tools: our restrictions and vaccinations, because with Delta we cannot rely on just one.
“If we get this right, if we keep case numbers low while we vaccinate people, then it makes it easier for us to keep control of Covid while we ease restrictions in the future.”
Ardern says non-compliance with level 3 rules has been one of the biggest contributors to new cases.
Auckland will remain in level 3 with current restrictions for another two weeks.
She says any easing of restrictions over this time will not work towards the plan of minimising cases will vaccination rates increase.
There are now Covid-19 cases across 124 suburbs of Auckland.
She says the alert level 3 rules in Auckland are the toughest restrictions in place anywhere in the OECD at the moment.
Ardern acknowledged experts suggesting a level 4 circuit breaker for Auckland but says public health advises it would be unlikely to reduce case numbers “because of the nature of the outbreak and compliance has been an issue”.
On staying at level 3: “I know this is hard and I want to acknowledge the ongoing impact on Auckland businesses of staying at level 3.”
She says an enhanced business support package for Auckland is being worked on, which will be revealed on Friday.
The rest of New Zealand will remain at level 2.
Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield says so far, there have been no positive cases that have come out of protests in Auckland. “Not as yet, our hope is there aren’t.”
Vaccine rollout update
Bloomfield expects that in two weeks’ time 80-85 percent of Aucklanders will be fully vaccinated. He says bookings are no longer a good forecasting system as walk-in vaccinations are popular.
Bloomfield says they have nearly finalised advice on getting an alternative vaccine for people who are willing to be vaccinated but refuse to have the Pfizer vaccine.
Ardern says there is a need to remove any barrier that is inhibiting vaccine reaching Māori health providers.
She says no one should be having to crowdfund for mobile vaccination clinics, the government just needs to direct resources to the right place.
Ardern says the government is working to recognise that people overseas have been vaccinated against Covid-19, particularly with vaccines other than Pfizer.
There were 60 new community cases of Covid-19 announced today – 57 in Auckland and three in Waikato.
RNZ understands ministers were also due to consider a traffic light-like system New Zealand could move to once the population is highly vaccinated.
It could mark the next phase, away from using alert level restrictions, to a mix of protective measures in the event of outbreaks.
That could include mask use, gathering limits, social distancing, proof of vaccination and scanning.
It could be some months before it would be ready to be implemented.
Ardern, however, would not confirm if the Covid-19 protection framework will be a ‘traffic light system’.