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ENZED's “essential workers” in the CONVID-19 war…

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Author Topic: ENZED's “essential workers” in the CONVID-19 war…  (Read 447 times)
Kiwithrottlejockey
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« on: April 08, 2020, 12:39:34 pm »


from The Washington Post…

Tooth fairy and Easter Bunny are ‘essential workers’,
New Zealand's Jacinda Ardern confirms


“If the Easter Bunny doesn't make it to your household, we have
to understand that it's a bit difficult at the moment,” she said.


By JENNIFER HASSAN | 8:24AM EDT — Monday, April 06, 2020

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern holds a news conference on Sunday in Wellington. — Photograph: Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images.
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern holds a news conference on Sunday in Wellington. — Photograph: Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images.

DURING a time of global crisis, climbing death tolls and widespread uncertainty, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has been hailed globally for her compassionate handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

She continued to win hearts on Monday when she clarified who exactly has made a list of “essential workers.”

“You'll be pleased to know that we do consider both the tooth fairy and the Easter Bunny to be essential workers,” she said, smiling. “But as you can imagine, at this time they're going to be potentially quite busy at home with their family as well and their own bunnies.”




“I say to the children of New Zealand, if the Easter Bunny doesn't make it to your household, we have to understand that it's a bit difficult at the moment for the bunny to perhaps get everywhere,” she said.

Ardern then suggested households help create Easter egg hunts for children in neighborhoods by placing images of eggs in their windows. In recent weeks, many New Zealanders, Americans and Britons have been placing teddy bears in their windows to help create teddy bear hunts for children as they go for walks with their parents.

On March 25, Ardern announced a four-week nationwide lockdown, instructing all residents to remain at home unless they were undertaking “essential work,” such as health care, or carrying out important tasks, such as buying food or picking up medicine. Ardern acknowledged there are signs the stay-at-home order has worked, but she called out “idiots” for not complying. It is not yet known whether the strict lockdown measures will be lifted or extended.

When Ardern announced the lockdown, she said it imposed “the most significant restrictions on New Zealanders' movements in modern history.”

New Zealand's death toll is significantly lower than in the rest of the world, with just one confirmed death and 1,106 confirmed cases of the virus.

In recent days, the prime minister has been widely praised for remarks regarding countries considering herd immunity as a strategy amid the covid-19 outbreak.

“In New Zealand, we never ever considered that as a possibility, ever,” she said. “Herd immunity would have meant tens of thousands of New Zealanders dying, and I simply would not tolerate that.”


__________________________________________________________________________

Jennifer Hassan is the social media editor for the foreign desk at The Washington Post. Before joining The Post in 2016, Jennifer was global community manager for the international chat app Viber. Before Viber, Jennifer honed her breaking news skills as the U.K. social media editor at MailOnline. Jennifer frequently reports from London and works closely with foreign correspondents. Jennifer is also responsible for leading The Washington Post's messaging app strategy. Educated at Walthamstow School for Girls in England, Jennifer earned a BA in English from Brunel University.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2020/04/06/tooth-fairy-easter-bunny-are-essential-workers-new-zealands-jacinda-ardern-confirms
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« Reply #1 on: April 08, 2020, 12:54:15 pm »

haha there's always a job for you then
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Kiwithrottlejockey
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« Reply #2 on: April 08, 2020, 02:03:15 pm »


from The Washington Post…

New Zealand isn't just flattening the curve. It's squashing it.

The number of new coronavirus cases is starting to decline as the country
pursues a policy of elimination rather than containment.


By ANNA FIFIELD | 6:31AM EDT — Tuesday, April 07, 2020

The deserted central business district of Wellington, New Zealand, on March 26, after the country's lockdown kicked in. — Photograph: Marty Melville/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images.
The deserted central business district of Wellington, New Zealand, on March 26, after the country's lockdown kicked in.
 — Photograph: Marty Melville/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images.


HAVELOCK NORTH, NEW ZEALAND — It has been less than two weeks since New Zealand imposed a coronavirus lockdown so strict that swimming at the beach and hunting in bushland were banned. They're not essential activities, plus we have been told not to do anything that could divert emergency services' resources.

People have been walking and biking strictly in their neighborhoods, lining up six feet apart outside grocery stores while waiting to go one-in-one-out, and joining swaths of the world in discovering the vagaries of home schooling.

It took only 10 days for signs that the approach here — “elimination” rather than the “containment” goal of the United States and other Western countries — is working.

The number of new cases has fallen for two consecutive days, despite a huge increase in testing, with 54 confirmed or probable cases reported on Tuesday. That means the number of people who have recovered, 65, exceeds the number of daily infections.

“The signs are promising,” Ashley Bloomfield, New Zealand's director general of health, said Tuesday.

The speedy results have led to calls to ease the lockdown, even a little, for the four-day Easter holiday, especially as summer lingers on.

But Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is adamant that New Zealand will complete four weeks of lockdown — two full 14-day incubation cycles — before letting up. She has, however, given the Easter Bunny special dispensation to work this weekend.

How has New Zealand, a country I still call home after 20 years abroad, controlled its outbreak so quickly?

When I arrived here a month ago, traveling from the epicenter of China via the hot spot of South Korea, I was shocked that officials did not take my temperature at the airport. I was told simply to self-isolate for 14 days (I did).

But with the coronavirus tearing through Italy and spreading in the United States, this heavily tourism-reliant country — it gets about 4 million international visitors a year, almost as many as its total population — did the previously unthinkable: It shut its borders to foreigners on March 19.

Two days later, Ardern delivered a televised address from her office — the first time since 1982 that an Oval Office-style speech had been given — announcing a coronavirus response alert plan involving four stages, with a full lockdown being Level 4.


A lone cyclist at sunrise in Auckland, New Zealand, on March 26. The country's strict lockdown measures appear to be paying off. — Photograph: Phil Walter/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images.
A lone cyclist at sunrise in Auckland, New Zealand, on March 26. The country's strict lockdown measures appear to be paying off.
 — Photograph: Phil Walter/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images.


A group of influential leaders got on the phone with her the following day to urge moving to Level 4.

“We were hugely worried about what was happening in Italy and Spain,” said one of them, Stephen Tindall, founder of the Warehouse, New Zealand’s largest retailer.

“If we didn't shut down quickly enough, the pain was going to go on for a very long time,” he said in a phone interview. “It's inevitable that we will have to shut down anyway, so we would rather it be sharp and short.”

On March 23, a Monday, Ardern delivered another statement and gave the country 48 hours to prepare for a Level 4 lockdown. “We currently have 102 cases,” she said. “But so did Italy once.”

From that Wednesday night, everyone had to stay at home for four weeks unless they worked in an essential job, such as health care, or were going to the supermarket or exercising near their home.

A few hours before midnight, my phone sounded a siren as it delivered a text alert: “Act as if you have COVID-19. This will save lives,” it said, referring to the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. “Let's all do our bit to unite against COVID-19.”

From the earliest stages, Ardern and her team have spoken in simple language: Stay home. Don't have contact with anyone outside your household “bubble.” Be kind. We're all in this together.

She's usually done this from the podium of news conferences where she has discussed everything from the price of cauliflowers to wage subsidies. But she also regularly gives updates and answers questions on Facebook, including one done while sitting at home — possibly on her bed — in a sweatshirt.

There have been critics and rebels. The police have been ordering surfers out of the waves. The health minister was caught — and publicly chastised by Ardern, who said she would have fired him if it weren't disruptive to the crisis response — for mountain biking and taking his family to the beach.

But there has been a sense of collective purpose. The police phone line for non-emergencies has been overwhelmed with people calling to “dob in,” as we say here, reporting others they think are breaching the rules.

The response has been notably apolitical. The center-right National Party has clearly made a decision not to criticize the government's response — and in fact to help it.


A poster hangs in the window of a closed store during lockdown in Wellington, New Zealand, on April 2. — Photograph: Birgit Krippner/Bloomberg News.
A poster hangs in the window of a closed store during lockdown in Wellington, New Zealand, on April 2.
 — Photograph: Birgit Krippner/Bloomberg News.


These efforts appear to be paying off.

After peaking at 89 on April 2, the daily number of new cases ticked down to 67 on Monday and 54 on Tuesday. The vast majority of cases can be linked to international travel, making contact tracing relatively easy, and many are consolidated into identifiable clusters.

Because there is little evidence of community transmission, New Zealand does not have huge numbers of people overwhelming hospitals. Only one person, an elderly woman with existing health problems, has died.

The nascent slowdown reflected “a triumph of science and leadership,” said Michael Baker, a professor of public health at the University of Otago and one of the country's top epidemiologists.

“Jacinda approached this decisively and unequivocally and faced the threat,” said Baker, who had been advocating for an “elimination” approach since reading a World Health Organization report from China in February.

“Other countries have had a gradual ramp-up, but our approach is exactly the opposite,” he said. While other Western countries have tried to slow the disease and “flatten the curve,” New Zealand has tried to stamp it out entirely.

Some American doctors have urged the Trump administration to pursue the elimination approach.

In New Zealand's case, being a small island nation makes it easy to shut borders. It also helps that the country often feels like a village where everyone knows everyone else, so messages can travel quickly.

New Zealand's next challenge: once the virus is eliminated, how to keep it that way.

The government won't be able to allow people free entry into New Zealand until the virus has stopped circulating globally or a vaccine has been developed, Baker said. But with strict border control, restrictions could be gradually relaxed, and life inside New Zealand could return to almost normal.

Ardern has said her government is considering mandatory quarantine for New Zealanders returning to the country post-lockdown. “I really want a watertight system at our border,” she said this week, “and I think we can do better on that.”


__________________________________________________________________________

Anna Fifield is the Beijing bureau chief for The Washington Post, covering all aspects of greater China. She was The Post's bureau chief in Tokyo between 2014 and 2018, focusing on Japan and the Koreas but periodically reporting from other parts of the region. She particularly concentrated on North Korea, trying to shed light on the lives of ordinary people there and also on how the regime managed to stay in power. She is the author of The Great Successor: The Divinely Perfect Destiny of Brilliant Comrade Kim Jong Un. She started as a journalist in her home country of New Zealand where shed gained a BA from Victoria University of Wellington and a post-graduate diploma in journalism from the University of Canterbury, then worked for the Financial Times for 13 years. During her time there, she reported from almost 20 countries, from Iran and Libya to North Korea and Australia. During the 2013-2014 academic year, she was a Nieman journalism fellow at Harvard, studying how change happens in closed societies.

__________________________________________________________________________

Related to this topic:

 • REUTERS VIDEO: Ardern calls the Easter Bunny an ‘essential worker’

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/new-zealand-isnt-just-flattening-the-curve-its-squashing-it/2020/04/07/6cab3a4a-7822-11ea-a311-adb1344719a9_story.html
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Kiwithrottlejockey
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« Reply #3 on: April 08, 2020, 02:04:00 pm »


New Zealand has a “real leader”.

Contrast that with America, which has a stupid “fake president”.

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Im2Sexy4MyPants
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« Reply #4 on: April 08, 2020, 02:08:07 pm »

 Grin
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« Reply #5 on: April 10, 2020, 02:03:07 pm »


New Zealand isn't just flattening the curve it's flattening our jobs, our money, our economy, our future
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Kiwithrottlejockey
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Having fun in the hills!


« Reply #6 on: April 10, 2020, 02:26:15 pm »


I'm alright, Jack Woodville's Village Idiot.
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If you aren't living life on the edge, you're taking up too much space! 

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