Pubs, restaurants and non-essential shops could be SHUT under local lockdown tiers to tackle Indian variant

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PUBS, restaurants, and non-essential shops could be shuttered again in Covid hotspots under emergency plans to bring back the tiers system.

Officials have drawn up a blueprint which could see areas with severe outbreaks plunged back into the highest level of restrictions.

 Read our coronavirus live blog for the latest updates

Officials haven’t ruled out a return to a tiers system in England

No 10 is said to be leaning more towards the reimposition of local lockdowns than delaying the June 21 freedom date for the whole country.

Under the plan communities where the Indian variant is spreading would be put back into last year’s Tier 4 level of curbs.

Hospitality and non-essential shops would have to close, with businesses being handed £18,000 grants to cope.

And people in those areas would be ordered to stay at home once more, according to The Times.

Cabinet minister George Eustice today acknowledged local lockdowns “would be an option” if the virus starts to get out of control.

The environment secretary said: “We cannot rule anything out at this stage. If we do have a deterioration in some of these areas, then of course we can’t rule out that we would put in place certain local lockdown.

“But our preferred outcome is we really double down and get the vaccination rates up in those areas that are seeing these problems so we can give them the immunity they need to this virus and then we won’t need to have any such local lockdowns.”

Some ministers are concerned that last year’s experiment with the Tiers system showed it had limited effect in containing the virus.

And Mr Eustice said “we can never rule out that there may have to be a delay” to the June 21 end of lockdown although “we want it to go ahead”.

Putting back the roadmap would mean more compensation having to be paid to mass venues such as nightclubs and festivals.

The are concerns over the spread of the Indian variant

Environment secretary George Eustice

A Cabinet minister told Politico: “The PM will do what he can to keep to the national timeframe of the 21st.

“I expect local lockdowns will be more likely.”

It comes after Downing Street yesterday refused to rule out the possibility of local lockdowns leading to another tiers system in England.

Matt Hancock has refused to rule out regional measures across the country in response to tackling the new variant – and promised to take whatever action needed.

Ministers are privately cautious about the possibility of returning to local measures, and Boris Johnson has insisted he wants the country to move together.

But hotspots are bubbling up in Bolton, and cases rising in Greater Manchester and London.

No10 was asked if local measures may include a specific tier system like the one which was in place last year.

It included a medium, high, very high and stay at home alert system, with different rules for different areas across the system.

Tier 4 see people told to stay at home in essentially another lockdown.

Tier 3 meant Brits were banned from mixing inside from others outside their household, and pubs and restaurants were shut up.

But as of the third lockdown, which was announced at the start of January, national measures across England replaced those.

In Scotland they have returned to a form of tiers, with Glasgow and Moray in higher restrictions than the rest of the country thanks to rising cases there.

Up there you can’t mix inside homes, but seeing others in pubs and cafes is allowed. And you cannot leave the area for the moment either.

A No10 spokesperson was asked if a possible return to local measures may mean a return to the tiers system.

He replied: “Well I don’t want to sort of get ahead of where we are at the moment and start getting into hypothetical situations.

“As the Prime Minister’s set out we’ve moved as a country in step three, albeit with very targeted increases in search vaccinations and testing in these areas where we’re seeing rises.

“That’s what we wanted to proceed with if at all possible, but we don’t want to rule anything out.

“And I think until we have more data and more evidence we won’t be making those judgements.”

Modelling given to Sage from Warwick University showed that if the Indian variant is up to 50 per cent more transmissible, it could cause daily hospitalisations to reach 5,500

It came as No10 also refused to confirm that the review of social distancing may not now be done by the end of the month – over fears about the Indian variant.

The PM’s spokesperson would only say: “We want to do it as soon as possible, I am not going to give a set time for doing that.”

It raises the possibility of social distancing staying past June 21, if the variant throws things off track.

Fears over the variant come as pubs and restaurants can finally reopen in full today, with Brits now able to hug family and mix with pals indoors in groups of up to six. 

Government sources stressed they were committed to the measures they are implementing at the moment – which includes pumping extra vaccines into local centres, and having local buses drive around to help get people jabbed.

More pop up sites are in place in Bolton, and Blackburn the vaccine centres are opening longer hours, and extra communications campaigns are taking place.

Health officials are going door to door asking people to book their jabs, and more community pharmacies are offering them too.

It comes after the PM confirmed last week that second jabs would be sped up for the clinically vulnerable and over 50s – with the gap between vaccines slashed from 12 weeks to 8.

A vaccine drive is underway in Bolton, where cases of the India variant have spiked

Brits line up to get their jabs

Exercise classes outside in London today as lockdown rules are eased

Brits enjoy a pint inside a pub today for the first time in months

Ministers think this strategy will help shield more Brits in hotspot areas and make sure they have as much protection as possible.

But officials are also worried about the number of people who have passed on a jab, and haven’t had one at all.

Some areas, including parts of Bolton people being urged to come forward for jabs even if they aren’t in the eligible age range – contrary to the JVCI advice which means it should be rolled out by age.

Teenagers as young as 17 are being urged to come forward – with 9,000 people in the area jabbed at the weekend.

Huge queues were seen as locals lined up to get a Covid vaccine after claims that all residents could get a jab.