The NSW treasurer has called for the reintroduction of the JobKeeper wage subsidy scheme amid Greater Sydney’s COVID-19 outbreak as Labor demands a summit to discuss the health crisis.
Tensions are high in NSW as case numbers continue to rise and police hunt down thousands of people who ignored public health orders on Saturday to protest lockdowns.
Despite a lockdown of Greater Sydney entering its fifth week, case numbers of the deadly Delta strain of the virus hit a new high on Saturday as NSW reported 163 new local infections.
Visitors to the Chris O’Brien Lifehouse cancer hospital in Sydney’s inner west have potentially been exposed to the virus.
NSW Health indicated that visitors to the centre around lunchtime on Tuesday were considered to be close contacts, after a patient who attended for an appointment tested positive.
Disquiet over the lockdown erupted dramatically on Saturday afternoon, as thousands marched through Sydney’s CBD.
At least 57 people have been arrested over the protest action, which Premier Gladys Berejiklian said left her “utterly disgusted”.
Two men have also been charged with allegedly striking a police horse.
A team of more than 20 detectives is working to identify more of the protesters and either charge or fine them.
The NSW government is frustrated with rising case numbers, which have persisted despite the imposition of more severe restrictions.
Mr Perrottet on Sunday called for the reintroduction of JobKeeper, telling Nine newspapers that workers were in danger of “slipping through the cracks” amid an extended lockdown.
He said JobKeeper was crucial in 2020 for maintaining the relationship between employers and stood-down employees.
The Australian Council of Trade Unions has also called for the reinstatement of JobKeeper.
The NSW government had earlier lobbied the federal government to reinstate JobKeeper, but without success.
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg on Sunday again knocked back Mr Perrottet’s suggestion, saying current support was adequate.
“It’s a lot more flexible, it’s available to casuals and it’s money that is going out the door as quickly as 40 minutes,” Mr Frydenberg told Sky News.
COVID-19 disaster payments in NSW range from $375 to $600 and the government says more than 600,000 payments have been administered.
The NSW Labor opposition, meanwhile, said the government should host an online summit bringing together stakeholders including community leaders, unions and business peak bodies.
“The summit could act like a community cabinet, alongside the NSW cabinet, to provide important community buy-in, feedback and acceptance,” Labor said in a statement on Sunday.
The latest lockdown escalation has prevented all but the most essential workers in Cumberland and Blacktown local government areas leaving those areas, joining Fairfield residents.
Ms Berejiklian has described vaccination as the way out of the outbreak, but her plea for more Pfizer stocks has been rebuffed.
Instead, NSW will have to settle for 50,000 more Pfizer doses from the federal government’s national stockpile.
Ms Berejiklian has said she will soon provide the state with a “road map” until the state reaches a good proportion of its citizens vaccinated.
Three regional NSW local government areas in the state’s central west are also under stay-at-home orders until at least July 28.
Local elections across NSW have also been postponed by three months to December 4.
NSW Health on Saturday night issued an alert about a confirmed COVID case on Virgin flight VA1139 from Sydney to Ballina on July 14, with anyone aboard deemed a close contact.
AAP
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