Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
ABC News
ABC News
Health
Judd Boaz

Vaccine mandates, masks in airports to be scrapped, while visitor restrictions at aged care to be eased

COVID restrictions will be eased further in Victoria as the state transitions to living alongside the virus. (ABC News: Danielle Bonica)

Victoria's COVID-19 restrictions will ease from next week, with mask requirements, vaccine mandates and isolation rules all set to be relaxed.

The tranche of changes is due to be introduced from 11.59pm on Friday, June 24, with further easing of restrictions earmarked for the end of winter. 

"This is a sensible implementation of minor and progressive changes," Minister for Health Martin Foley said.

"Business wanted a bit of time in the run-up to that and the public health advice was more than happy to give that."

Airport mask rules, third dose mandates lifted

In line with a statement from the Australian Health Protection Principal Committee (AHPPC) earlier this week, masks will no longer be required to be worn in airports. 

They will remain mandatory on flights, as well as all other forms of public transport, such as trains, trams and buses.

Mask mandates will be removed at Victoria's airports following new recommendations from the AHPPC. (ABC News: Danielle Bonica)

Workplace vaccine mandates are also set to change, with Victoria's high vaccination rate credited as a major factor.

Government-imposed three-dose mandates in education, food distribution, meat and seafood processing and quarantine accommodation sectors will be scrapped.

Education workers will also be able to return to work without a third dose.

However, workers in sectors that interact with vulnerable people — such as residential aged care and disability care, healthcare and emergency services — will still be required to have three doses of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Rules requiring general workers to work from home unless they are double-vaccinated will also be lifted. 

Employers will still be able to set their own workplace conditions with regards to vaccination status.

Deakin University epidemiologist Catherine Bennett said the high vaccination rates across the state made many prior mandates obsolete.

"You either go to three if you've got an argument for a high-risk setting or you would remove the mandate now, given the high immunity in the population."

Professor Bennett said employers can now roll back vaccine mandates with the knowledge that the majority of workers will be protected from serious illness.

About 68 per cent of Victorians aged 16 and older have received three doses of a vaccine, while 94.6 per cent aged 12 and older have received two doses. 

Professor Catherine Bennett said the two-dose vaccine mandate is not as useful with the dominance of the Omicron variant. (ABC News: Peter Drought)

The Victorian head of peak employer association Ai Group, Tim Piper, said the removal of vaccine mandates would have major impacts on the supply chain issues affecting businesses.

"Manufacturers, service and hospitality are telling me that up to 30 per cent of their workers could be unable to come to work on any particular day. So that's probably going to halve," Mr Piper said.

"The good news for consumers is it will mean there are fewer empty shelves and the ranges that were there before might be replenished again."

Isolation requirements for positive cases eased

Victorians who test positive for COVID-19 will no longer be strictly confined to their homes.

Under the incoming changes, a positive case may now leave home to drive a household member directly to or from education or work without leaving their vehicle.

Professor Bennett said while transmission is still possible with the new settings, the change is sensible.

"It's just taking the bubble into the car with people from your household," she said.

"I think that's just being pragmatic without really changing the risks, because the household members are already exposed to that person."

Positive cases may also leave home to seek urgent medical care, get a COVID-19 test or, in an emergency, including the risk of harm.

The seven-day isolation requirement will still be in effect outside of these conditions.

Changes to visitor rules in healthcare settings

Visitor caps to care facilities, including residential aged care and disability will be removed.

Visitors will be able to see any number of people, with a requirement that they test negative on a rapid antigen test on the day of the visit.

If a test is unavailable, a person can only be present for limited reasons such as end-of-life visits.

Facilities are able to introduce their own visitor rules to respond to local outbreaks or specific risks.

Victoria's seven-day COVID-19 case average has dropped consistently throughout June, reaching its lowest point since March.

The state recorded 6,601 new COVID cases on Saturday and 29 deaths, bringing the total number of active cases to 41,216.

Mr Foley said that while the pandemic was not over, the easing of restrictions represented a major step towards living with the virus.

"The COVID numbers seem to have plateaued and gradually come down, the last few weeks we've seen a reduction in numbers to Saturday's low figure," Mr Foley said.

"What these measures are about is a highly vaccinated community learning to live safely and sustainably alongside COVID."

Health officials give greenlight to scrap masks at airport
Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.