100 days of lockdown - what's changed in the Moorlands and beyond?

By Jack Lenton

1st Jul 2020 | Local News

The coronavirus pandemic has left a devastating impact on health, wealth, work and happiness after landing on UK shores - how have things changed in the Staffordshire Moorlands and beyond in the 100 days since lockdown was introduced?

Pubs and non-essential shops were closed as daily outings and travel were limited as the Moorlands, which is home to just under 100,000 people, weathered the virus.

The latest figures show that there are now 254 cases of coronavirus in the area, with 2,409 cases in Staffordshire as a whole.

With the worst of the virus now appearing to subside and lockdown beginning to lift, authorities have urged the public to stick to social distancing rules to prevent a second spike after Leicester was forced into a local lockdown.

Alan White, Staffordshire County Council's Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for Health, Care and Wellbeing, said: "As part of our Covid-19 Local Control Plan, we are monitoring cases on a daily basis to ensure we are in a position to mobilise efforts to identify any outbreaks and do everything we can to prevent the spread of Covid-19.

"Throughout this pandemic, Staffordshire has pulled together like never before and our efforts can't stop now. We are making it clear to people that if they want to protect themselves, their families and their communities they need to stick to the rules. This is not the time to let our guard down."

Sadly, the virus has claimed the lives of 69 people so far in the Moorlands, and Public Health England figures show there has been a recent spike in Moorlands cases, with eight being recorded between June 13 and 19 and a further 13 between June 20 and 26.

According to these figures, the new cases have made the area the 10th worst coronavirus hotspot in the UK for new cases, although any kind of local lockdown still remains unlikely.

Alan added: "While everyone is looking forward to lockdown easing this weekend we must not become complacent. The risks to our communities and to our local economies are still very much there and we must all do everything we can to stop a second peak of infections."

Apart from the sheer clinical cost to the human race – more than half a million global deaths in almost 10.5 million confirmed cases – businesses have been forced to close, adapt or otherwise weather the disruption with stock markets plummeting.

Around Britain, those living through the virus have seen several grim milestones being passed.

July 1 sees another of those milestones chalked up in the UK: 100 days since the introduction of lockdown which led to sparse high streets, and planes - usually sending millions to much-needed holidays near and far - forced to sit on the tarmac.

But this coming Super Saturday – which sees a real loosening of Government restrictions – is being seen as a silver lining for the public and business world alike.

After 100 days in lockdown, Nub News looks at some of the numbers that have shaped the experience – for good as well as bad.

  • When the UK's lockdown was announced on March 23, the cumulative number of deaths involving Covid-19 that had occurred in the nation up to that date was 1,000. There had been 950 in England and Wales, 43 in Scotland and seven in Northern Ireland (based on figures for
death registrations).

The death toll, based on registered deaths, passed 10,000 on day 13 of the lockdown (April 5), 20,000 on day 21 (April 13), 30,000 on day 29 (April 21), 40,000 on day 40 (May 2) and 50,000 on day 62 (May 24).

The Department of Health and Social Care said 43,575 people had died in hospitals, care homes and the wider community after testing positive for coronavirus in the UK as of 5pm on Sunday June 28, up by 25 from 43,550 the day before.

The Government figures did not include all registered deaths involving Covid-19 across the UK, which – as of June 30 – totalled just under 55,000.

  • Spare a thought for Leicester, as yesterday it became the first to feel

the effects of local lockdown imposed by Health Secretary Matt Hancock after a spike in infections saw three times more cases than the city with the next highest total.

Its seven-day infection rate was 135 cases per 100,000, with nearly 1,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19 in the past fortnight.

  • Britain's economy is set to plunge by 10.2 per cent in 2020 and global activity will take a hit of nearly £10 trillion (£9.6 trillion) from the coronavirus pandemic by the end of 2021, the International Monetary Fund has warned.

In an update to its already grim set of forecasts in April, the IMF said it now expects the global economy to contract by 4.9 per cent in 2020, compared with the three per cent it predicted two months ago.

The FTSE 100 – the index of the largest UK companies – opened the year at 7,542.44 on January 2 and closed on June 30 at 6,169.74, a drop of 18.2 per cent in six months. It dipped under the 5,000-point barrier on March 23, the day when Prime Minister Boris Johnson

announced a UK-wide lockdown.

Some economists have said the crisis could see levels of unemployment return to the three million-plus witnessed in the 1980s.

  • And for those who have felt the financial force of stepping outside the boundaries of emergency laws, there is mounting pressure on police chiefs to review all lockdown fines.

More than 40 MPs and peers have joined calls from 13 human rights groups, lawyers and campaigners for the National Police Chiefs' Council to look again at penalties handed out to those apparently flouting the rules.

Former Conservative cabinet minister Andrew Mitchell, ex-Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and acting Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey as well as Baroness Shami Chakrabarti are among those to put their name to the letter alongside groups including Amnesty International UK and

Liberty.

A total of 18,439 fixed penalty notices (FPNs) including 15,856 in England and 2,583 in Wales were recorded by forces between March 27 and June 22, according to provisional NPCC data.

North Yorkshire Police has issued the most fines so far (1,122), followed by the Metropolitan Police (1,072) and Devon and Cornwall (978) compared to just 42 in Staffordshire.

But it's not all been doom and gloom...

  • The world of work has seen dramatic changes in the past 100 days, many of which will become permanent, ending decades of office life.

Millions of people have switched from commuting to offices to working from home, or have agreed flexible arrangements, and even part-time shifts.

Huge numbers of workers have enjoyed the benefits of swapping an office desk for their front room or garden shed, giving an immediate boost to their work-life balance.

Surveys throughout the past three months have shown the popularity of flexible, home-working, especially among parents, a trend experts believe is now embedded in the UK's working culture.

The changes could help tackle the UK's long-hours culture, reduce sickness absence and improve productivity – problems which have dogged industry for decades.

A new survey of 1,500 working parents by childcare provider Bright Horizons showed that half are set to demand flexible work in the future, with only around one in eight wanting to go back to pre-pandemic working.

  • The encouragement to exercise every day as a 'break out' from virtual house arrest has been a huge plus after number of experts and studies have hinted that obesity can have a detrimental effect on your chances of fighting off the virus

In addition to taking advice from TV fitness coach Joe Wicks, there has been a huge surge in the numer of aspiring runners.

Hundreds of thousands of people have downloaded the Couch to 5K ap during lockdown.

The Public Health England app is designed for beginners and encourages them to incrementally increase the amount they run each week.

More than 858,000 people downloaded the app between March and the end of June – a 92 per cent increase from the same period in 2019 when the app was downloaded 448,000 times.

The NHS-backed app provides guided commentary from a virtual coach who helps people increase the amount they run week by week.

  • And finally, the environment has improved as the lockdown seems to have also had an impact on the level of carbon dioxide decline.

"Reduction in road vehicle activity has taken us back to levels similar to the 1950s," said Dr David Carslaw, a reader in urban air pollution at the University of York.

He added: "In terms of emissions ... we've probably gone back to the early 1900s."

     

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