Harrogate and Dales could soon find out what tier it'll be in after lockdown
The current restrictions are due to end at the start of December.
Last updated 20th Nov 2020
Residents across Harrogate, Craven and North Yorkshire could find out what their post-lockdown lives will look like as soon as next Wednesday.
The current restrictions are due to end on December 2 with the government proposing a new, revamped tier system for the run-up to Christmas.
The new tiers are likely to be tougher than those in place before the lockdown was brought in earlier this month after health officials said that the previous Tier 1 restrictions, which allowed households to mix, did not slow the spread of the virus.
North Yorkshire had been in Tier 1 before the second lockdown.
At a meeting of North Yorkshire’s Outbreak Management Advisory Board this afternoon (Nov 19), Dr Lincoln Sargeant, North Yorkshire’s director of public health, said that there had been indications that the route out of lockdown would be announced next week.
Dr Sargeant said: “I am told that the announcement of tiers and what levels we might be moving into will be announced next week, with a tentative date of Wednesday November 25 I’m told.
“Discussions are ongoing with the Secretary of State and others so we would hope to hear what the triggers and criteria might be for those tiers and what the restrictions might be in each of them.”
Dr Sargeant said that there was still no indication how the tiers would be applied and if it would be on a district-wide or a county-wide level.
It's because Scarborough currently has an infection rate of 457 per 100,000 people, while Harrogate, Craven and North Yorkshire’s other six districts are around the England average of 260.
Harrogate's weekly infection rate is 226 per 100,000 people and Craven's is 264 per 100,000 people.
Dr Sargeant said: “Before lockdown, Scarborough had the lowest levels in the county, and understandably felt they should not be going into a higher level of restrictions with areas like Harrogate and Craven which were highest at that point.
“I think we now see the situation reversed and how quickly it can change in small districts.”
He added: “My understanding is that the general appetite has been to do this over larger areas rather than smaller areas.”