Guidance for Bolton updated to clarify no local lockdown's imposed
It comes after 24 hours of confusion
Guidance for Bolton and the seven other areas considered hotspots for the Indian variant of coronavirus has been updated to make clear there are no local lockdowns imposed.
The Department of Health and Social Care is instead issuing advice to those living in the areas after ministers were accused of bringing in rules on socialising and travelling by stealth''.
It insisted lockdown measures were not being put in place.
A Government spokesperson said: We will be updating the guidance for areas where the new Covid-19 variant is spreading to make it clearer we are not imposing local restrictions.
Instead, we are providing advice on the additional precautions people can take to protect themselves and others in those areas where the new variant is prevalent.''
This includes urging people to meet outdoors rather than indoors, staying two metres apart from people not in the same household, and minimising travel in and out of the area.
The spokesperson said: These are not new regulations but they are some of the ways everyone can help bring the variant under control in their local area.''
The move comes after a day of confusion over the measures, which appeared on the Government website on Friday, but without an official announcement.
Local leaders in the eight areas said they were unaware of any change.
In a joint statement released on Tuesday the directors of public health in the affected areas effectively said the advice could be disregarded, saying it had been confirmed there is no restriction on travel in and out of the areas.
The statement said: Following the national coverage of recently revised guidance we have met with national officials and confirmed there are no restrictions on travel in or out of each of our areas: there are no local lockdowns.
In areas where the new Covid variant is spreading we are all working together to boost testing and vaccination and to support self-isolation.
There are sensible public health precautions people can take as individuals in line with the sorts of advice we have all been following throughout the pandemic.
We will keep sharing that and working with national officials to make sure people understand what they need to think about as they go about their daily lives.''
The Government said the recommendations to the hotspot areas were first issued on May 14 - with the Prime Minister urging people to be extra cautious'' - before being
formally'' published online last week.
No 10 stressed that the guidance was not statutory'' and the Government wanted to move away from
top-down edicts'' as lockdown eases.
But ministers came under fire for what Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham labelled a fairly major communications error'' which had caused
huge amounts of confusion''.
The mixed messaging prompted the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Coronavirus to urge the Government to return to daily televised press briefings on the pandemic.
Dr Dan Poulter, vice-chairman of the group, said: Over a year into the pandemic, the Government's public health messaging needs to be clearer.
People are being asked to piece together a jigsaw puzzle of information. What we need is much clearer information about the Government's plans to keep the Indian variant under control, what local measures may remain in place and for how long, and whether they will be legally binding.
It would help if the Government committed to daily press briefings as we approach June 21, as well as ensuring any local guidance is made available on the NHS Covid app.''
Caroline Lucas, the group's second vice-chair, added: Instead of providing clarity, the Government today has sown the seeds of yet more confusion.
People are now being effectively told they can travel to Lisbon but not Leicester. It's little wonder these contradictory messages have left the public more bewildered than ever.
This does feel like local lockdowns being sneaked through under the cover of Government guidance. Urgent clarity is needed over how long this guidance will remain in force and what financial support is being offered to affected businesses in these areas.''
Earlier, Labour's shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth said many of the areas involved had borne the brunt of the crisis these last 15 months'' and felt
abandoned'' by Westminster.
Local lockdowns by stealth, by the back door, and the Secretary of State (Matt Hancock) doesn't even have the courtesy to come and tell us,'' the Leicester South MP said.
Mr Ashworth urged second doses of vaccines to be rolled out at a faster rate to protect against the highly transmissible Indian mutation.
Downing Street and vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi, answering the Commons question on behalf of the Government, defended the handling of the battle against the B1617.2 variant, which vaccines being rolled out in the UK have been shown to help guard against.
Mr Zahawi told MPs that the onus was on personal responsibility and that Boris Johnson - who has signalled he does not want to return to locally tiered measures - still intends to take a national approach to lifting restrictions.
As the Prime Minister said, we want the whole country to move out of these restrictions together and we're trusting people to be responsible and to act with caution and common sense as they have done throughout this pandemic and to make decisions about how best to protect themselves and their loved ones,'' Mr Zahawi said.
Bolton Council leader David Greenhalgh told a press conference that people in the North West town should behave sensibly'' and there was no need to
be cancelling holidays''.
It follows a slight rise in weekly registrations of deaths involving Covid-19 in England and Wales, according to new figures.
However, the numbers are likely to have been affected by the early May bank holiday.
A total of 151 deaths registered in the week ending May 14 mentioned Covid-19 on the death certificate, according to the Office for National Statistics, a 17% rise from 129 the previous week.