Health minister Matt Hancock on Thursday announced final details of a regional system set to take effect when blanket restrictions on England’s 55 million population end after a month-long lockdown – dictating the terms of daily life for the country’s citizens and businesses.

“Hope is on the horizon but we still have further to go so we must all dig deep. The end is in sight, we mustn’t give up now,” Hancock told parliament, alluding to growing prospects for a vaccine against the coronavirus in the coming months.

Britain has Europe’s highest official death toll from the COVID-19 pandemic and has been hit hard by a second wave. The government’s response on lockdown rules, procurement and testing has been criticised as disjointed, expensive and slow.

“We must follow these new rules and make sure that our actions today will save lives in future and help get our country through this,” Hancock said.

Thursday’s decision had been keenly awaited by businesses across the country whose ability to trade in the critical pre-Christmas period will be affected. Hospitality is one of the large sectors that will suffer the most in higher tiers.

Hancock said cases were rising in parts of the capital and needed to be brought under control.

London will be in tier 2; it was also in tier 2 before the national lockdown was imposed, although a tighter set of rules for each tier was announced earlier this week.

For London, this means no mixing of households indoors and a maximum of six people permitted to meet outdoors, hospitality venues can only offer alcohol alongside a substantial meal, and attendance will be tightly limited at sporting events.

PRE-CHRISTMAS ‘SIGH OF RELIEF’

“Many businesses across London and the Square Mile will be breathing a collective sigh of relief now that they will be able to trade in the run up to Christmas,” said City of London Corporation Policy Chairwoman Catherine McGuinness.

However some large regions of England, including the northern city of Manchester and the prosperous southeastern county of Kent, were placed in tier 3, the most restrictive, where the rate of infection is highest.

In tier 3, hospitality venues must remain closed, except for takeaway services.

“This will cause real hardship for people whose jobs will be affected and risk the loss of many businesses,” Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham said.

The decisions have been made according to five criteria, including the pressure on health services in each region and the rate of change in positive coronavirus cases.

The announcement angered some local and regional politicians in the hardest hit areas, goading a rebellious core within the ruling Conservative Party who feel the government is overreacting and unjustifiably restricting daily life.

“The authoritarianism at work today is truly appalling. But is it necessary and proportionate to the threat from this disease?” Conservative lawmaker said on Twitter, demanding the government publish their evidence.

Only three regions in England were placed in the lowest tier 1 category: the Isle of Wight, Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly – all far removed from more heavily populated metropolitan areas of the country.

Tiers will be reviewed on Dec. 16, making it possible for areas that slow the spread of the virus to be moved down a notch before Christmas

Mr Hancock told the Commons: “Hope is on the horizon but we still have further to go. So we must all dig deep.”

“We should see these restrictions not as a boundary to push but as a limit on what the public health advice says we can safely do in any area,” he added.

Around 23 million people across 21 local authority areas will be in the highest level – tier three – including Birmingham, Leeds, Sheffield, Tees Valley Combined Authority and North East Combined Authority.

Lancashire, Leicester, Lincolnshire, Slough, Bristol, Kent and Medway will also be in tier three.

Differences between the new tiers include restrictions on where households can meet up:

  • tier one: the rule of six applies everywhere, indoors and out
  • tier two: the rule of six applies outdoors but there is no household mixing anywhere indoors
  • tier three: can only meet other households in outdoor public spaces like parks, where the rule of six applies

Gyms and close-contact beauty services like hairdressers will be able to open in all tiers. Guidance said people in all tiers who can work from home, should continue to do so.

Pubs and restaurants in tier two can only open to serve “substantial meals”, while those in tier three can only operate as a takeaway or delivery service.

The areas in Tier 3 are:

• Greater Manchester

• Birmingham and Black Country

• Newcastle-Upon-Tyne

• Leeds

• Hull

• City of Wolverhampton

• Kent and Medway

• South Yorkshire

• Hartlepool

• Middlesbrough

• Stockton-on-Tees

• Redcar and Cleveland

• Darlington

• Sunderland

• South Tyneside

• Gateshead

• North Tyneside

• County Durham

• Northumberland

• Lancashire

• Blackpool

• Blackburn with Darwen

• The Humber

• West Yorkshire

• Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent

• Warwickshire, Coventry and Solihull

• Derby and Derbyshire

• Nottingham and Nottinghamshire

• Leicester and Leicestershire

• Lincolnshire

• Slough

• Bristol

• South Gloucestershire

• North Somerset

The areas in Tier 2 are:

• Liverpool City Region

• London

• Warrington and Cheshire

• Cumbria

• York

• North Yorkshire

• Northamptonshire

• Rutland

• Bedfordshire and Milton Keynes

• Herefordshire

• Worcestershire

• Shropshire and Telford & Wrekin

• Essex, Thurrock and Southend on Sea

• Norfolk

• Suffolk

• Hertfordshire

• Cambridgeshire, including Peterborough

• Hampshire, Portsmouth and Southampton

• Surrey

• Buckinghamshire

• Oxfordshire

• Reading

• Wokingham

• Bracknell Forest

• Windsor and Maidenhead

• West Berkshire

• Dorset

• Bournemouth

• Christchurch

• Poole

• South Somerset, Somerset West and Taunton, Mendip and Sedgemoor

• Bath and North East Somerset

• Gloucestershire

• Wiltshire and Swindon

• Devon

• East Sussex

• West Sussex

• Brighton and Hove

Just three areas are in Tier 1:

• Isle of Wight

• Cornwall

• Isles of Scilly

 

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