North East leaders react to Tier 3 restriction news
The North East will be staying in Tier 3 restrictions up til Christmas and into the New Year
Despite falling rates of Covid-19 cases, today the Health Secretary Matt Hancock announced the North East will be remaining in Tier 3 restrictions - along with most of the country.
Large swathes of Southern England will be joining us here in tier 3 - as London did earlier this week.
Tier 3 restrictions mean pubs, bars and restaurants must close, aside from takeaway food, theatres and indoor entertainment must stay closed, and people can not mix with other households.
Mr Hancock says the rules will come in on Saturday because infections are continuing to rise.
A joint statement by the leaders of Newcastle, Sunderland, Gateshead, North and South Tyneside, Northumberland and County Durham reads:
"Today the government has made the decision to keep the North East under the very high Tier 3 restrictions. While we accept this decision on public health grounds, we still need a greater understanding of how moving out of Tier 3 will be determined in the New Year.
We will continue to press government for fair decisions and the right level of economic support – especially for the hospitality sector which has been so heavily impacted by the restrictions.
We will also work with ministers on how best to deploy targeted community testing to open up our economy, while seeking localisation of the national test and trace programme.
As leaders, we are incredibly proud of and grateful to the people of the North East for their efforts in following the rules, laws and guidance throughout the pandemic.
Their efforts have seen infection rates come down but sadly the virus continues to be a potent threat, putting pressure on NHS services, and we need to keep doing our bit to protect the most vulnerable in society.
We recently launched our Thank You communications campaign, fronted by ordinary folk from across the LA7. These are people representative of our communities, talking about the impact Covid has had on their lives and the efforts and sacrifices we have all made as well as looking forward to when we can once again do the things we love.
It is also a reminder that we can’t afford to throw away all the hard work when the chance of getting back to normal is within our grasp.
The Pfizer/Biontech vaccine is being rolled out into communities and this week we have seen some of our residents, aged over 80, invited to be vaccinated in GP surgeries, which is tremendous progress.
But this will be a long process and we all need to be patient. That is why we are asking everyone to carefully consider their plans and actions over the festive period. Just because the law says we can all meet three households over five days, doesn’t mean we should to choose to do so.
Increases in social contact and household mixing over Christmas could see infections rise steeply again in the New Year so we must act responsibly to supress the virus.
Of course, we understand people wanting to see each other but we also want families to be able to see each other and celebrate future Christmases, birthdays and family events.
For the sake of yourselves, your loved ones and the wider community please continue to follow all the guidance. Hands. Face. Space. And book a test if you have symptoms.
Once again, thank you for all your efforts. Have a safe Christmas."
Only Herefordshire, Bristol and North Somerset will see their Tier level drop.