It was confirmed earlier today that Greater Manchester will be heading into Tier 3 when lockdown ends next week. From next Wednesday, December 2nd, the whole region will be placed in the strictest tier, despite our infection rate reducing faster than any other part of the country. So why is Greater Manchester being placed into Tier 3?
David Dixon / Geograph
This morning, as part of the announcement on which area will be placed in which tier, the government published a written ministerial statement. These outline the rationale for why each region in England has been placed in the tier they’re in, including why the whole of Greater Manchester is in Tier 3. The government said: “While there has been continued improvement in Greater Manchester, weekly case rates remain very high, especially amongst those aged over 60, at around 260 per 100,000 people. “The pressure on the local NHS is decreasing in some areas but remains a concern; Manchester University hospital and Pennine Acute Trust remain under significant pressure.”
Earlier today Andy Burnham responded to the news that Greater Manchester is heading to Tier 3, saying that cities in the North will be ‘levelled down’ by the new tier system and that it is ‘the opposite of what the government has promised to do’. The Mayor of Greater Manchester also said that he will be asking for the region to be moved into Tier 2 in a few weeks time if rates continue to fall like they have been. According to Matt Hancock, there are five indicators for making a decision on which tier a region is in:
case rates in all age groups
cases in over 60s
rate at which cases are rising or falling
positivity rate
local pressures on NHS
The tiers are set to be reviewed on Wednesday December 16th, so there is still a chance Greater Manchester could be in Tier 2 in the run up to Christmas.
The new rules across all tiers include:
Uniform set of rules, there will be no negotiations by different regions
Everyone should work from home if they can
Shops and personal care services can open
Early years settings, schools, colleges and universities remain open
Registered childcare, other supervised activities for children and childcare bubbles allowed
Indoor leisure – gyms and swimming – can open
Elite sport, under-18 sport and disabled sport can continue
Police will get new powers to close down premises breaking the rules
What Greater Manchester can expect in Tier 3:
No mixing of households indoors or most outdoor places – rule of six in outdoor spaces such as parks and sports courts
Hospitality venues closed, except for takeaway, drive-through or delivery
Indoor entertainment venues closed
Avoid travelling outside the area other than where necessary
No overnight stays outside local area, unless necessary for work, education or similar reasons
Accommodation closed (with limited exceptions such as work purposes)
Places of worship open but people cannot interact with anyone outside their household or support bubble
Weddings, civil partnerships and wakes can have 15 guests – but no wedding receptions allowed
Funerals can have 30 guests
Exercise classes and organised adult sport can take place outdoors, but avoid higher-risk contact activity
Group exercise and sports indoors should not take place, unless with household/bubble
Elite sporting events, live performances and large business events banned but drive-in events permitted.
Tier 1 Rules:
Households can mix inside and outside, but the rule of six applies
Bars, pubs and restaurants must be table service only, last orders at 10pm, closing by 11pm
Entertainment can reopen
Avoid travel into Tier 3 areas
Overnight stays permitted with your household/bubble, or up to six people from different households
All accommodation can reopen
Places of worship can reopen but more than six people from different households cannot interact
Weddings, civil partnerships and wakes can have 15 guests
Funerals can have 30 guests
Exercise classes and organised adult sport can take place outdoors, but rule of six indoors
Elite sporting events, live performances and large business events can take place with 50% capacity, or 4,000 people outdoors/1,000 indoors (whichever is lower) – social distancing applies
Tier 2 Rules:
No mixing of households indoors apart from support bubbles – rule of six outdoors
Pubs and bars must close unless operating as restaurants, and hospitality venues can only serve alcohol with substantial meals
Last orders at 10pm, close by 11pm
Reduce the numbers of journeys made and avoid travel into Tier 3 areas
Overnight stays permitted with your household or support bubble
Accommodation open
Places of worship open but people cannot interact with anyone outside their household or support bubble
Weddings, civil partnerships and wakes can have 15 guests
Funerals can have 30 guests
Exercise classes and organised adult sport can take place outdoors, but not indoors if there is any interaction between different households
Elite sporting events, live performances and large business events can take place with 50% capacity, or 2,000 people outdoors/1,000 indoors (whichever is lower) – social distancing applies