Australia news LIVE NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian resigns Victoria records 1488 new coronavirus cases Queensland records two cases easing grand final concerns
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The Queensland government is providing an update on the coronavirus situation in that state.
NSW Liberal Party president Phillip Ruddock has raised concerns over the method and timing of the corruption watchdogâs public investigation into outgoing Premier Gladys Berejiklian.
The former federal attorney general said he believed the NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption should operate like a department of public prosecution, which establishes whether a person has a case to answer before announcing they are the subject of an investigation.
âIf you look at the way in which serious issues of criminality are dealt with, you donât put people on trial by innuendo until you have established there is substantial issues and people have had a chance to address them,â Mr Ruddock told Seven Network on Saturday morning.
âShe has not had a chance to address them and you will not be putting someone on trial for those issues unless they have been put and you had a chance to address them.
âIn my judgement, we deal with these issues with probity, ensure there is a case to answer before you put peopleâs reputations on the line.â
Mr Ruddock did not weigh in on who he believes should replace Ms Berejiklian, but said he hoped the Liberal partyroom dealt with the matter quickly.
Queensland has recorded two new local cases of COVID-19, and has again avoided lockdown. Health Minister Yvette DâAth said the two cases were linked to the existing aviation cluster and were household contacts.
Ms DâAth said the animal handler who travelled from NSW has also been determined as a negative case.
But health authorities remain confident the aviation cluster is being controlled, with the NRL grand final on Sunday still expected to go ahead at 75 per cent capacity.
Ms DâAth said there would be pop up vaccination clinics around Suncorp Stadium for people looking to get jabbed ahead of the game.
A football and netball club on Victoriaâs south west coast has been identified as close contact COVID-19 exposure sites.
Warrnambool Football Netball Club was declared a tier-1 site on Tuesday, September 28 between 7am and 12pm.
Anyone who attended the club during that timeframe has to immediately get tested for COVID-19, and quarantine for 14 days, regardless of whether they receive a negative test result.
Tobacconist Northpoint, also in Warrnambool, was identified as a tier-2 or casual contact site on Monday, September 27 between 9.10am and 9.40am.
Several other venues in the coastal city were also identified as exposure sites late on Friday night.
Also among the late-night exposure site additions was Rowville Medical Clinic in Melbourneâs south-east, which was declared tier-1 on Thursday, September 28 between 4.50pm and 5.40pm.
Two playgrounds in Victoriaâs north were declared tier-2 sites, as was Castlemaine Hospital about 120 kilometres north-west of Melbourne, and an early learning centre in Flemington.
A full list of Victorian exposure sites can be found here.
The 1488 new COVID-19 cases posted for Victoria is a fresh record for daily infections in the pandemic topping the 1438 from two days ago.
The state also recorded two deaths for the period.
Victoria has recorded 1488 new community cases of coronavirus as 36,878 vaccines were administered on Friday.
The Victorian Department of Health has tweeted this morning that the new infections take the number of active cases in the state to 11,591.
Aged care advocates say visits should be allowed at all nursing homes in Victoria if people coming to see fully immunised residents have also had a double dose of a coronavirus vaccine.
Most residents and staff in Australiaâs 2600 aged care homes have now had at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine and the NSW state government this week announced from October 11 aged care residents could have two visits daily. Visitors must be fully vaccinated for coronavirus and aged over 12.
But Victoriaâs rules on visitors to aged care homes do not mention vaccination, instead stipulating residents can have visitors for reasons including their âphysical or emotional wellbeingâ, or if they are living with dementia.
Emily Riglarâs grandmother, who the family has asked not be named.
Victorian homes interpret the rules in different ways; some welcome visitors while others insist relatives can only come into a home if a residentâs physical or emotional wellbeing takes a dramatic downturn.
âWe canât view residential aged care homes as some sort of prison,â said Paul Sadler, chief executive of Aged and Community Services Australia, which represents not-for-profit homes.
Physiotherapist Emily Riglar has seen the impact of Victoriaâs strict rules for aged care visits on her 94-year-old grandmother, who lives by herself in a retirement village.
Ms Riglarâs grandmother, who the family has asked not be named, had a stroke last year and visitor restrictions and a lack of access to physiotherapy have taken a toll.
Read the full story here.
Hi, itâs Mathew Dunckley, digital editor at The Age, here picking up the blog for the rest of the morning.
One of the biggest developments in recent days for Victoria was yesterdayâs announcement from Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews that all authorised workers would need to get vaccinated.
The announcement was welcomed by business groups for providing some certainty but concerned civil liberties organisations and others.
The move raises a number of practical questions such as how will it be enforced, who does it affect and what happens if you canât track down a jab appointment?
Thereâs a great article from Michael Fowler explaining all those things and more that you can read here.
Every person on Victoriaâs authorised worker list must have their first COVID-19 vaccine dose by October 15 to continue working on site.
Announcing the news on Friday, Premier Daniel Andrews said those workers must be fully vaccinated by November 26.
Premier Daniel Andrews has announced mandatory vaccines for authorised workers.Credit:Eddie Jim
He estimated the new requirement would apply to up to 1.25 million Victorians.
While NSW enforced a mandate on authorised workers in local government areas of concern, this is the broadest mandate applied so far in Australia.
Weâve answered your questions about the mandate here.
Residents of Casino in northern NSW have entered a snap lockdown to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
NSW Health said late on Friday that the stay-at-home order for people in the town of Casino would apply from midnight until 11 October âdue to an increased COVID-19 public health riskâ.
The stay-at-home order also applies to anyone who has been in Casino since September 24.
âEveryone in this suburb must stay at home unless it is for an essential reason, which includes shopping for food, medical care, getting vaccinated, compassionate needs, exercise and work or tertiary education if you canât work or study at home,â NSW Health said in a statement.
âNSW Health will continue to closely monitor the evolving situation with COVID-19 and will not hesitate to update its advice to protect the health and wellbeing of the people of NSW.
âWe urge people throughout NSW to continue to come forward for testing at the first sign of even mild symptoms.
âHigh vaccination rates are also essential to reduce the risk of transmission and protect the health and safety of the community.â
The nearby Kyogle local government area is in lockdown until October 11. The two spots in northern NSW join more than a dozen regional areas under stay-at-home orders, including Snowy Monaro, Bathurst, Dubbo, Lake Macquarie, Queanbeyan-Palerang, Shellharbour, Cowra, Narromine, Oberon and Port Macquarie-Hastings.
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