Fresh fears for ‘Tier 4’ as ministers consider closing shops and issuing fresh ‘stay at home order’ as cases rise

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FEARS are growing that a possible Tier 4 might be needed in the worst hit parts of the country after Christmas – as cases rose in every area last week.

Yesterday another five million people were plunged into harsher Tier rules, sparking fresh concerns that the system isn’t working, just two weeks after it was reintroduced.

Brits will face even tougher restrictions in the New Year in Wales and Northern Ireland – and England may follow

Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Berkshire, Peterborough, Hertfordshire, Surrey with the exception of Waverley, Hastings and Rother on the Kent border of East Sussex, and Portsmouth, Gosport and Havant in Hampshire will join most of the country in Tier 3 as of Saturday.

It means two thirds of the country are now in the top Tier rules – with restrictions nearly matching another lockdown but with shops and no ‘stay at home’ order.

Health Secretary Hancock is understood to be considering additional curbs, including closing non-essential shops if mass testing fails to make an impact, The Times reported.

A Whitehall official told the paper: “There is a case for going further than Tier 3 and it is getting stronger.

“[That could mean] closure of non-essential retail, stay-at-home orders.

“That would have to be actively considered in conversation with the local authority.”

Mr Hancock has regularly encouraged rules to be stronger and has favoured tougher lockdown measures to save lives.

But he will be up against the Chancellor if he presses to close more shops, who is likely to demand they stay open to help the struggling economy.

It came as:

  • Boris Johnson warned people to isolate from today if they wanted to see family at Christmas next week
  • Despite England’s four-week national lockdown ending only a fortnight ago, positive cases reached another 35,000 yesterday
  • Just North Somerset, Bristol and Herefordshire went down a Tier, despite hopes that Manchester, Leeds and parts of Birmingham might be able to be moved thanks to a crackdown on their cases
  • Matt Hancock warned everyone in Kent to act as if they had coronavirus and stay away from others

Christmas is expected to cause a spike in infections as many people are allowed to mix indoors for the first time in months.

Thankgiving in the US saw a similar rise in cases, which Professor Chris Whitty has said will lead to more deaths overall.

Yesterday Downing Street refused to rule out a third lockdown after Christmas, and schools minister Nick Gibb could not either.

Northern Ireland is set to go into a six WEEK lockdown from Boxing Day, it was confirmed today.

In some of the harshest rules seen yet, supermarkets will be forced to close by 8pm.

Wales will also go into lockdown after Christmas, with shops shut, a stay at home order introduced, and people told not to mix.

Scotland hasn’t ruled it out, but has not announced any plans yet.

 

KENT WARNING

The Health Secretary said yesterday everyone in Kent must be extremely cautious.

The rate for the whole of Kent is a staggering 537.4 cases per 100,000 people, compared with 204.2 for England overall.

And 11 of the top worst affected areas in England are in Kent, too.

Mr Hancock said earlier this week that the new strain of coronavirus could be partly responsible for the virus appearing to spread incredibly quickly there.

Matt Hancock announcing the new tiers in the House of Commons