Melbourne Students Return to Classrooms

Melbourne Students Return to Classrooms
Students sanitize at Lysterfield Primary School on May 26, 2020 in Melbourne, Australia. Daniel Pockett/Getty Images
AAP
By AAP
Updated:

Parents across Melbourne will breathe sighs of relief when primary school and VCE students return to classrooms after almost 10 weeks.

Year eight students and special school students will also resume on-site learning on Oct. 12, while year 10 students enrolled in a VCE or VCAL program will be able to attend on-site for those classes.

Students in years eight to ten are due to return in a fortnight.

It comes as Victoria’s state of emergency and state of disaster were extended to 11.59 p.m. on Nov. 8, while Premier Daniel Andrews looks at relaxing restrictions.

Victoria recorded 12 new cases in the 24 hours to Sunday morning in its fourth straight day of double-digit infections.

One death was also recorded, ending a three-day stretch without a fatality and taking the state toll to 810.

Melbourne’s rolling 14-day case average dropped marginally to 9.3, with the figure at 0.4 for regional areas.

Cases with an unknown source for 14 days as of Thursday were 10.

Authorities had wanted the two-week rolling daily case average to fall to five, with less than five mystery cases, for the city’s lockdown to ease in line with regional Victoria.

However Andrews again flagged Melbourne won’t be ready to take a “full step” to eased restrictions on October 19, but hinted restrictions on outdoor activities were likely to be relaxed.

“It will be the stuff that people are really missing,” he said.

He also indicated businesses in regional Victoria were more likely to see relief than those in Melbourne.

“I think there'll be more economic things that can happen in regional Victoria because the numbers are low,” he said.

“Does that mean we’re doubling, tripling, quadrupling the number of people that can go to a pub? No.

“But if we can take some further small and safe steps we will.”

His government has also announced new quarantine and business safety measures.

Close contacts who refuse a COVID-19 test on day 11 of quarantine will be forced to spend another 10 days in isolation, while regional Victorian businesses will have to take all reasonable steps to ensure patrons are not from Melbourne or face a $9913 fine.

It follows a Melbourne man illegally dining at a Kilmore cafe, sparking a fresh outbreak in Mitchell Shire.

Both rule changes came into effect at 11.59 p.m. on Sunday.

By Tiffanie Turnbull
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