Huge changes to $500 Covid relief payments for lockdown-affected workers - as Scott Morrison sends 300,000 more vaccine doses to Sydney hotspots
Thousands more Sydneysiders will qualify for a $500 lockdown payment after the requirements were relaxed.
Greater Sydney residents who lose more than 20 hours of work a week can claim $500 a week from the federal government while those who lose fewer than 20 hours can claim $325.
Previously only people with less than $10,000 in their bank accounts could apply for the payment, but this requirement has been removed for lockdowns around the country that go on for more than three weeks.
Lockdown for eastern Sydney will hit the three-week mark on Friday and workers in the rest of the city will qualify on Sunday.
Some 300,000 extra doses of Covid vaccine will be diverted to Sydney to help fight the growing outbreak in city
Meanwhile, some 300,000 extra doses of Covid vaccine will be handed to Sydney to help fight the growing outbreak of the highly infectious Delta strain which numbers 395 cases.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the doses, which are half Pfizer and half AstraZeneca, will be targeted to three local government areas of south-west Sydney where most of the new cases are being recorded.
In those areas only 48 to 51 per cent of over 70s have had their first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine, so the government will speed up the process by reducing the time between doses from 12 weeks to eight weeks, consistent with medical advice.
Mr Morrison said he has managed to secure extra Pfizer doses from overseas so other states will not lose supply.
Sydney suffered 38 new cases on Thursday, a day after Premier Gladys Berejiklian extended lockdown for another week until Friday July 16.
Of those cases, 20 were out and active in the community; 11 throughout their infectious period and nine for part of it.
Sydneysiders wait in a queue outside a Covid-19 vaccination centre in the Homebush suburb of Sydney on Wednesday
Australia has only fully vaccinated 9.81 per cent of adults, meaning state governments still want to use lockdowns to prevent the disease from spreading rapidly.
Mr Morrison said he supports the suppression strategy.
In the UK, 65 per cent of adults are fully vaccinated, allowing the government to relax restrictions.
But Mr Morrison said comparison is not fair because the UK started its rollout earlier because it was in an emergency and largely used the AstraZeneca vaccine which is not recommended for under 60s in Australia.
He also said nations with onshore production of Pfizer, including the US, had much greater access to that jab than Australia and other nations depending on imports.
'At no stage, at any time in the past 12 months, has there been any suggestion we would reach the same level of vaccination as in the UK by ,' Mr Morrison said.
'The suggestion that somehow there was a vaccination rate that would have somehow put us in a different situation than we are right now is simply not true.'
Case numbers throughout the state have bounced around in recent days - peaking at 38 cases on Thursday
Premier Berejiklian earlier said the chances of the three-week lockdown ending as scheduled on July 16 remained in the balance.
'Experts have told us it is achievable,' Ms Berejiklian said. 'If it was not achievable we would not have provided those details to the community.
'All the experts have said if every single person does the right thing, that we can get to where we need to go at the end of the three-week period.
'That is a big ask because we know that unfortunately, unintentionally at times, people don’t do the right thing, so it’s really important for all of us to have equal responsibility.'
The outbreak of cases that began on June 16 has now reached 395 local infections, with 40 of them requiring hospital treatment, and 11 in intensive care.
NSW Health said 21 of the new local infections reported in the 24 hours to Thursday morning are from south-west Sydney, which is the new epicentre of the outbreak that began in the city's east.
NSW Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant called for higher rates of testing in suburbs where the virus was spreading fastest: Smithfield, Glenfield, West Hoxton Park, and St Johns Park in the Fairfield local government area.
Ms Berejiklian once again pleaded with people from that area not to visit one another and only leave their houses when absolutely necessary.
'I want to say in the strongest possible terms, please, please avoid contact with other households,' she said.
How to claim the $500 lockdown payment if you lose work
Sydney residents who lose more than 20 hours of work a week can claim a one-off $500 disaster payment from the federal government, and those who lose less than 20 hours can claim $325.
NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet asked Federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg to reinstate JobKeeper but he refused.
'We are providing the same support to New South Wales in this lockdown as we did to Victoria just weeks ago,' Mr Frydenberg said.
To claim the cash you'll need a Centrelink online account linked to your myGov. It's easy to set these up.
Once you're logged in, you will be asked a few questions about your situation to see if you're eligible.
Officials need to know if you lived or worked in a Covid-19 hotspot that's under lockdown or restricted movement.
Once you've completed your claim, hit submit and officials will process it for you.
You don't need to call them, they'll send you an SMS when you successfully submit your claim.
If you are eligible, officials will make a payment into your bank account and send you a letter with the details.
For more information click here