Public should use common sense when meeting up outdoors – Raab

People should use “common sense” if they meet people from other households in the outdoors, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab has said, as the Government comes under continued pressure over “a lack of clarity” in its messaging to the public.

Boris Johnson unveiled a “conditional plan” on Sunday evening for easing restrictions in England, saying people could take unlimited exercise outdoors, travel to other places by car and should start going back to work if they cannot work from home.

Primary schools could begin to reopen on June 1 starting with reception and years 1 and 6, he said, while parts of the hospitality sector such as pavement cafes and cafes in parks could open in July.

But Scotland and Wales have rejected Number 10’s new “stay alert” slogan, while unions and the Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer criticised the plan for creating confusion.

On Monday, Mr Raab appeared to add to the uncertainty by saying people should only go to work from Wednesday. He also said it was fine to meet two people from another household as long as the households kept two metres apart.

Government officials said on Sunday evening people should go back to work from Monday. They also said the new rules meant you could meet only one other person from another household outdoors.

Speaking to the BBC on Monday, Mr Raab said people could now, for example, meet different family members separately on the same day while maintaining social distancing.

He said: “If you’re out in the park and you’re two metres apart, we’re saying now, (if you) use some common sense and you socially distance, you can meet up with other people.”

Asked if someone could meet their mother in the morning and their father in the afternoon, he said: “Outside in the outdoors, staying two metres apart, yes.”

When asked later if someone could meet up with both their parents in a park, Mr Raab said: “Well, you could if there’s two metres apart.”

HEALTH Coronavirus
HEALTH Coronavirus

However, Mr Raab said people should not play group sports such as football with other households.

“Two people from the same home could go and play tennis, because that’s something where they could stay two metres apart from everyone else,” he said.

“What you couldn’t then do, and this is why we say you’ve got to stay alert, you couldn’t then go into the clubhouse and mill around where you will be within two metres of other people.

“So, football would be one of those where I think would be very difficult to stay two metres apart if you’re playing, you know, 11-a-side or even five-a-side.”

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab
Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab

Mr Raab also said people could drive as far as they wanted to if there was an outdoor area they wished to visit.

He said: “You can drive as far as you want to drive to go and walk in a park or a particular area that you’re fond of as long as you maintain the social distancing.

“But obviously, if you’re going from one part of the UK to another, so if you’re going from England to Wales or from Scotland to Wales and different rules are in place because the devolved administrations take a different approach, you need to be very mindful of the regulations that they’ve got in place.”

Mr Raab also urged people to go back to work from Wednesday if they cannot work from home.

“If you can work from home, you should continue to do so, but there are nine sectors of the economy like manufacturing and construction, where people can’t do their job from home,” he said.

“So we’re saying to them they should now from Wednesday, go back to work.”

Shadow business secretary Ed Miliband immediately criticised the messaging, tweeting: “The PM didn’t say workplace changes applied from Wednesday.

“He said ‘And the first step is a change of emphasis that we hope that people will act on this week.’

“Wednesday was only mentioned in relation to other changes. Words matter.

“Clarity is essential. This is shambolic.”

On the issue of schools, Mr Raab said schools would be given “clear guidance” about social distancing and hygiene, adding there was a “much lower risk for young children getting this virus.”

But Patrick Roach, general secretary of teaching union NASUWT, said the profession has “very serious concerns” about children returning to school on June 1, adding no clear plan had been put in place.

The Prime Minister is due to face MPs on Monday afternoon and will publish a 50-page document setting out further details of his “road map”.

If we all #StayAlert and follow the rules, we can control the virus by keeping the rate of infection (R) and the number of new cases down.

Stay Alert ⚠️⬇️Control The Virus 📉⬇️Save Lives 💙 pic.twitter.com/JvGLxrDlAM

— UK Prime Minister (@10DowningStreet) May 11, 2020

He will give a statement to the Commons, with more information expected on a Covid-19 alert system, use of face coverings, and quarantine restrictions for travellers entering the UK.

The chairman of the British Medical Association (BMA), Dr Chaand Nagpaul, said the Government had created confusion in its messaging, adding that there was still “a considerable amount of community circulation of the virus going on”.

He added: “If we now allow the public to go to local parks in an unlimited sense, and to go outdoors… what we’ve not heard is how the Government will enforce social distancing and how it will avoid a whole neighbourhood playing in a park, with footballs moving from one group to another, and spreading the disease.

“So, I’m really concerned that there is no clarity.”

It comes as a YouGov/Good Morning Britain poll of more than 6,500 people found the public is split on whether they support the changes, with 44% saying they support the changes and 43% opposed.

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