Milestones
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Details
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Source
Documents
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January 2020
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19 January
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The Chief
Medical Officer (CMO) stated ‘the Australian Government Department of Health
is aware of the cases of novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) from the region of
Wuhan in China, and watching developments very closely’. It was noted that
any ill passengers reported on incoming flights would be met on arrival and
assessed by biosecurity officers (as per Australian legislation).
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B Murphy (Australian
Government CMO), Chief
Medical Officer’s statement on novel coronavirus, media release, 19 January 2020.
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21 January
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Following
a decision by the CMO, ‘human coronavirus with pandemic potential’ was added
to the Biosecurity (Listed Human Diseases) Determination 2016. This decision
triggered:
… the
standing up of the national incident centre, the standing up of the National
Medical Stockpile, the readiness and activation of the national trauma
centre, daily meetings of the Australian Health Protection Principal
Committee and meetings of state, territory and Commonwealth health ministers
to discuss pandemic readiness.
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Biosecurity (Listed
Human Diseases) Amendment Determination 2020
M Cash, ‘Answer
to Question without notice: COVID-19’, [Questioner: D Fawcett], Senate, Debates,
26 February 2020, p. 1497.
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Enhanced screening measures
for passengers arriving at Sydney Airport on direct flights from Wuhan began.
The CMO
announced that flights would be met by border security, biosecurity staff and
NSW Health, who would provide information to passengers in English and
Mandarin, outlining the symptoms of the disease and asking passengers to
identify themselves if they had symptoms. NSW health officials would follow up
with passengers suspected of having the virus.
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B Murphy (Australian
Government CMO), Chief
Medical Officer's media conference about novel coronavirus, transcript, 21 January
2020.
NSW Ministry of Health, NSW
Health advice to travellers returning for Wuhan, China, media release, 21 January 2020.
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23 January
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The
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) raised the level of travel
advice for Wuhan to ‘Level 3: Reconsider your need to travel’.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Transcript
of press conference, media release,
23 January 2020.
Department of Foreign
Affairs and Trade (DFAT), ‘COVID-19—Travel
advice level changes’, Smartraveller website.
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24 January
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DFAT
raised the level of travel advice for Wuhan and Hubei Province to ‘Level 4:
Do not travel’.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Update on novel coronavirus in Australia,
media release, 26 January 2020.
DFAT, ‘COVID-19—Travel
advice level changes’, Smartraveller website.
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25 January
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The Australian
Government confirmed the first case of novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in
Australia. The patient was a man from Wuhan who travelled from Guangdong to
Melbourne on 19 January. Victorian health authorities isolated the
patient and began contact tracing.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), First
confirmed case of novel coronavirus in Australia, media release, 25 January
2020.
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The
Australian Government confirmed three further cases of COVID-19 in Sydney.
All three cases were men who flew to Australia on separate flights from China
between 6 January and 20 January.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Update on novel coronavirus in Australia,
media release, 26 January 2020.
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27 January
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The CMO
announced that:
- there were five confirmed cases of
COVID-19 in Australia
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any return
travellers from China, particularly Hubei Provence, who developed symptoms
should get tested and
- the Australian Health Protection
Principal Committee (AHPPC) confirmed that any child who had been a contact
of someone with COVID-19 should be excluded from school for 14 days.
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B Murphy (Australian
Government CMO), Chief
Medical Officer’s update on novel coronavirus, media release, 27 January
2020.
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The
Minister for Foreign Affairs announced that DFAT was ‘working closely with
Chinese authorities and international partners to consider possible
assistance with travel for Australians from areas that are affected by
Chinese travel restrictions’.
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M Payne (Minister for
Foreign Affairs), Australians in Hubei province, China, media release, 27 January 2020.
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28 January
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DFAT
raised the level of travel advice for China overall to ‘Level 3: Reconsider
your need to travel’. Advice for Hubei province remained at ‘Level 4: Do not
travel’.
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DFAT, ‘COVID-19—Travel
advice level changes’, Smartraveller website.
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29 January
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The
Australian Government announced that it was seeking approval to evacuate some
Australians from Wuhan and the surrounding Hubei province. Any Australians
departing on any flight arranged by the Australian Government would be flown
to Christmas Island to undertake a period of quarantine of up to 14 days.
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S
Morrison (Prime Minister), M Payne (Minister for Foreign Affairs), G Hunt (Minister
for Health), and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Assisted departure and strict quarantine for
Australians from Wuhan/Hubei,
media release, 29 January 2020.
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In a
statement, the AHPPC recommended:
- People who have been
in contact with any confirmed novel coronavirus cases must be isolated in
their home for 14 days following exposure;
-
Returned travellers
who have been in Hubei Province of China must be isolated in their home for
14 days after leaving Hubei Province, other than for seeking individual
medical care.
These
recommendations were accepted by the Australian Government.
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Department of Health (DoH),
‘Australian
Health Protection Principal Committee (AHPPC) statement on novel coronavirus
on 29 January 2020’, DoH website,
30 January 2020.
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), D Tehan (Minister for Education) and B Murphy (Australian
Government CMO), Press
conference at Parliament House about novel coronavirus, transcript, 29 January
2020.
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The Prime Minister announced that 1 million masks
would be released from the national medical stockpile through Primary Health
Networks for general practices for those patients
and health workers who may have been exposed to COVID-19 or had symptoms.
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S
Morrison (Prime Minister), Transcript of press conference, media
release, 29 January 2020.
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30 January
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WHO
declared the outbreak of novel coronavirus as a ‘Public Health Emergency of
International Concern’, recommending all countries ‘be prepared for
containment, including active surveillance, early detection, isolation and
case management, contact tracing and prevention of onward spread …’
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WHO, ‘Statement
on the second meeting of the International Health Regulations (2005)
Emergency Committee regarding the outbreak of novel coronavirus (2019‑nCoV)’, WHO website, 30 January 2020.
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31 January
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In
response to WHO’s declaration and recommendations on 30 January, the
Health Minister noted ‘border, isolation, surveillance and case tracing
mechanisms are already in place in Australia’. The Health Minister also
announced that approximately 200 tests had been conducted in Australia, and
there were nine confirmed cases.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Update
on novel coronavirus, media release,
31 January 2020.
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February 2020
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1 February
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The
Australian Government announced updated travel advice, including:
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Foreign nationals (excluding
permanent residents) who had been in mainland China from 1 February were
banned from entering Australia for 14 days from the time they have left
or transited through mainland China.
-
Australian citizens and permanent
residents as well as their immediate family members (spouses, legal guardians
or dependants) were still able to enter Australia.
-
Australian citizens, permanent
residents and their families who entered Australia, who had been in mainland
China, would be required to self-isolate for 14 days from the time they
left mainland China.
- 500,000 masks would be made available
for airport and port staff and arriving passengers, and handheld thermometers
would be made available at impacted ports.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M Payne (Minister for Foreign Affairs), P Dutton (Minister for Home Affairs)
and G Hunt (Minister for Health), Updated travel advice to protect Australians from
the novel coronavirus, media
release, 1 February 2020.
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DFAT
raised the level of travel advice for China to ‘Level 4: Do not travel’.
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DFAT, ‘COVID-19—Travel
advice level changes’, Smartraveller
website.
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The
National Security Committee agreed to give the Australian Border Force
Commissioner discretionary powers to make decisions in relation to the
arrival in Australia of persons who were in transit when the enhanced border
announcement was made.
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Department of Home Affairs,
‘Statement
on visa cancellations—enhanced border control measures’, News archive, Department of Home Affairs website, 4 February
2020.
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The
Education Minister announced that he would be working with universities to
discuss the impact of the travel announcements on international students.
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D Tehan (Minister for
Education), Coronavirus
and higher education, media release,
1 February 2020.
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3 February
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A group
of 241 Australians evacuated from Wuhan arrived on Christmas Island and were
placed in quarantine for up to 14 days.
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Australian
confirmed cases of novel coronavirus on cruise vessel, media release, 5 February
2020.
F Bell and E Manfield, ‘Passengers
on coronavirus evacuation flight from Wuhan land on Christmas Island’, ABC News Online, 3 February 2020.
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5 February
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The
Health Minister announced that two Australians on board the Diamond
Princess cruise ship in Japan were confirmed to have contracted novel coronavirus.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Australian
confirmed cases of novel coronavirus on cruise vessel, media release, 5 February
2020.
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7 February
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The
Australian Government announced that Australian citizens and permanent
residents aboard a second assisted departure flight out of Wuhan would ‘spend
14 days in quarantine in the Howard Springs Accommodation Facility on
the outskirts of Darwin’. The flight, carrying 266 passengers, arrived in
Darwin on 9 February.
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P Dutton (Minister for Home
Affairs), G Hunt (Minister for Health), and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO),
Update on assisted departure of Australians from
Hubei province, media release, 7 February
2020.
M Payne (Minister for
Foreign Affairs), Assisted
departure flight from Wuhan, media
release, 9 February 2020.
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The
Education Minister announced mental health support for international
students, including a dedicated email and phone hotline to assist students
with questions or concerns
relating to their study and novel coronavirus.
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D Tehan (Minister for
Education), Mental
health support for international students, media release, 7 February 2020.
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11 February
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The
Minister for Health and the CMO noted that a range of resources, including a
1-800 number, factsheets and daily case updates, were available on the
Department of Health website to provide the general public with information
on coronavirus.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Press
conference, Parliament House—Canberra,
transcript, 11 February 2020.
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12 February
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The
Minister for Health announced that the Government would provide an additional
300,000 surgical masks to Primary Health Networks to support doctors, health
workers and pharmacists.
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G Hunt (Minister for
Health), M Payne (Minister for Foreign Affairs) and P Kelly (Australian
Government Deputy CMO), Doorstop,
Canberra, transcript, 12 February
2020.
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13 February
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The
National Security Committee of Cabinet agreed to extend the entry
restrictions on foreign nationals who had recently been in mainland China for
a further week from 15 February 2020.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister)
and G Hunt (Minister for Health), Extension of travel ban to protect Australians
from the coronavirus,
media release, 13 February 2020.
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17 February
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The
Australian Government announced that Australian passengers on the Diamond
Princess cruise ship in Japan would be evacuated to Australia and
undertake 14 days quarantine at the Howard Springs Accommodation
Facility in Darwin.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M Payne (Minister for Foreign Affairs), G Hunt (Minister for Health) and B
Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Transcript
of press conference, Melbourne, media
release, 17 February 2020.
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18 February
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The
Australian Government announced ‘$2 million in funding to support Australia’s
researchers as they work to understand and respond to the outbreak of novel coronavirus’. The funding would be provided from the Medical
Research Future Fund for an open and competitive grant opportunity to develop
a COVID-19 vaccine. Applications opened on 25 February 2020.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister),
and G Hunt (Minister for Health), Backing
important coronavirus research, media
release, 18 February 2020.
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), $2
million for vital coronavirus research,
media release, 25 February 2020.
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20 February
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The
Australian Government announced that travel restrictions on foreign nationals
entering Australia from mainland China would continue for a further week to
29 February 2020.
In
addition to the requirement for returning citizens, permanent residents and
their families who had been in mainland China from 1 February 2020 to
self-isolate for 14 days from the time they left mainland China, people
who had been in contact with someone confirmed to have coronavirus had to
self-isolate for 14 days from the time they were in contact with that person.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M Payne (Minister for Foreign Affairs) and G Hunt (Minister for Health), Continuing travel ban to protect Australians from
the coronavirus, joint media release, 20 February 2020.
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21 February
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The
Deputy CMO announced that passengers from the Westerdam cruise ship
(docked in Cambodia) were no longer required to undertake 14 days of
self-isolation on return to Australia as the AHPPC concluded that these
passengers presented a low risk of COVID-19.
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P Kelly (Australian
Government Deputy CMO), Westerdam
cruise ship passengers, media
release, 21 February 2020.
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22 February
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The
Australian Government announced that senior high school students (years 11
and 12) from China, excluding Hubei province, would be exempt from the travel
ban on a case-by-case basis. Any students returning to Australia would be required
to self-isolate for 14 days.
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G Hunt (Minister for
Health), B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), D Tehan (Minister for
Education) and J Merlino (Victorian Minister for Education), Transcript
of doorstop interview, Melbourne, media
release, 22 February 2020.
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23 February
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DFAT
raised the level of travel advice for Japan and South Korea to ‘Level 2:
Exercise a high degree of caution’.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Doorstop
interview, Canberra, transcript,
24 February 2020.
DFAT, ‘COVID-19—Travel
advice level changes’, Smartraveller website.
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25 February
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At the
request of the CMO, the Australian Government activated the Emergency
Response Plan for Communicable Disease Incidents of National Significance:
National Arrangements (National CD Plan).
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Council of Australian
Governments (COAG) Communiqué, COAG Meeting, Sydney, 13 March 2020.
DoH, Emergency
response plan for communicable disease incidents of national significance:
national arrangements (National CD plan), May 2018.
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26 February
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The
Australian Government announced that travel advice was raised to ‘Level 2:
Exercise a high degree of caution’ for northern Italy (Lombardy and Veneto).
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Doorstop,
Canberra, transcript, 26 February
2020.
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27 February
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The Prime
Minister announced that based on expert medical advice, the Australian
Government had agreed to implement the Australian
Health Sector Emergency Response Plan for Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19). In addition, the travel ban for China would apply for
another week.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Transcript
of press conference, Canberra, media
release, 27 February 2020.
DoH, Australian
health sector emergency response plan for novel coronavirus (COVID‑19), 18 February 2020.
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29 February
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The Australian Government announced that as of 1 March
2020:
- The Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade will raise the level of the travel advisory for
Iran from level 3 to level 4—do not travel;
- Foreign nationals
(excluding permanent residents of Australia) who are in Iran on or after 1
March 2020, will not be allowed to enter Australia for 14 days, from the time
they have left or transited through Iran;
- Australian citizens
and permanent residents will still be able to enter, as will their immediate
family members (spouses, legal guardians or dependants only). They will be
required to self-isolate at home for 14 days from the day they left Iran.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister),
G Hunt (Minister for Health) and M Payne (Minister for Foreign Affairs), Update
on novel coronavirus (COVID‑19) in Australia, media release, 29 February 2020.
DFAT, ‘COVID-19—Travel
advice level changes’, Smartraveller
website.
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March 2020
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1 March
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DFAT raised
the level of travel advice for all of Italy to ‘Level 2: Exercise a high
degree of caution’ and to ‘Level 3: Reconsider your need to travel’ for ten
small towns in Lombardy and one in Veneto.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Update
on COVID-19 in Australia, media
release, 2 March 2020.
DFAT, ‘COVID-19—Travel
advice level changes’, Smartraveller
website.
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2 March
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The
Australian Government reported the first local case of community transmission
of COVID‑19, taking the total number of cases to 33.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Update
on COVID-19 in Australia—community transmission, media release, 2 March 2020.
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The
Australian Government announced that:
… people returning from Italy and
South Korea need to monitor their health for the following 14 days after
their arrival and practice good hygiene. Healthcare or residential aged care workers
should not attend work for 14 days and practise social distancing.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Update
on COVID-19 in Australia, media
release, 2 March 2020.
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3 March
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The Reserve
Bank of Australia (RBA) announced a reduction in the target cash rate to 0.50
per cent.
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Reserve Bank of Australia
(RBA), Statement
by Philip Lowe, Governor: Monetary Policy Decision, media release, 3 March
2020.
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The
Australian Government announced assistance to the Pacific and Timor-Leste to
help regional countries respond to coronavirus, including providing personal
protective equipment (PPE) for healthcare workers and assisting with
laboratory diagnosis, risk communication strategies and national response
planning and budgeting.
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M Payne (Minister for
Foreign Affairs) and A Hawke (Minister for International Development and
the Pacific), Coronavirus
assistance to Pacific and Timor-Leste,
media release, 3 March 2020.
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4 March
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The
Minister for Health announced that self-isolation requirements for people
travelling from Iran would extend to any person who arrived from 19 February
2020 onwards.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Doorstop
interview, Canberra, transcript, 4 March
2020.
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5 March
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The
Australian Government announced that:
Foreign nationals (excluding
permanent residents of Australia) who are in the Republic of Korea on or
after today [5 March] will not be allowed to enter Australia for 14 days
from the time they have left or transited through the Republic of Korea.
The Australian Government also
activated the National Coordination Mechanism to:
… coordinate activities across
the Commonwealth, state and territory governments as well as industry to
ensure a consistent national approach is taken to provide essential services
across a range of critical sectors and supply chains.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M Payne (Minister for Foreign Affairs) and G Hunt (Minister for Health), Update
on novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in Australia, media release, 5 March 2020.
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DFAT
raised the level of travel advice to ‘Level 3: Reconsider your need to
travel’ for the Republic of Korea and ‘Level 4: Do not travel’ for Daegu.
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DFAT, ‘COVID-19—Travel
advice level changes’, Smartraveller
website.
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6 March
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The
Minister for Aged Care and Senior Australians announced that a forum was held
with aged care providers. More than 70 representatives attended the forum,
which ‘underlined the protocols and guidelines to reinforce local infection
control, while offering a platform to address to wider concerns of residents,
staff and families’.
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R Colbeck (Minister for Aged
Care and Senior Australians), Morrison
Government and the aged care sector working together to tackle COVID-19
challenges, media release, 6 March
2020.
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The
Australian Government announced a shared health funding deal with the states
and territories, which would be uncapped and demand driven:
The Australian Government will
pay 50 per cent of additional costs incurred by state and territory health
services as a result of the diagnosis and treatment of patients with
COVID-19, those suspected of having the virus or activities to prevent the
spread of it.
In
addition to the forum held with the aged care sector, the Australian
Government held a forum with primary care providers.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister)
and G Hunt (Minister for Health), Coronavirus
public health partnership with the states: Commonwealth to meet 50 per cent
of state costs, media release, 6 March
2020.
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8 March
|
The
Australian Government secured an additional 54 million face masks for the
National Medical Stockpile.
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G Hunt (Minister for
Health), Morrison
Government secures additional 54 million face masks to contain coronavirus outbreak, media release, 8 March 2020.
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10 March
|
The
Minister for Health announced 100 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Australia.
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G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Press
conference, Sydney, transcript, 10 March
2020.
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The
Minister for Industrial Relations announced that the Australian Government
held a meeting with unions and employer representatives to discuss
coronavirus.
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C Porter (Minister for
Industrial Relations), Doorstop,
Sydney, transcript, 10 March
2020.
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10 March
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DFAT raised the level of
travel advice for Italy overall to ‘Level 3: Reconsider your need to travel’
and to ‘Level 4: Do not travel’ for the region of Lombardy and certain
Italian provinces.
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DFAT, ‘COVID-19—Travel
advice level changes’, Smartraveller website.
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11 March
|
The Prime Minister announced
that on advice from the AHPPC, a travel ban would be extended to Italy as of 6pm.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Transcript
of press conference, Parliament House,
media release, 11 March 2020.
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The Australian Government
announced a $2.4 billion health plan to address COVID‑19. The
health package included:
- $100 million for people in home
isolation or quarantine because of
coronavirus to receive (bulk-billed) Medicare-funded telehealth consultations
(from 13 March)
- ‘… $25 million to fund home medicines
services which will enable patients to have their PBS prescriptions filled
online or remotely, and have the medicines delivered to their home’
-
$5 million to support GPs and
pharmacies by fast tracking the rollout of electronic prescribing nationally
- $50.7 million to expand the national
triage phone line to operate 24/7
-
$206.7 million for up to 100
dedicated respiratory clinics
-
$58.7 million for increased capacity
to prevent outbreaks in remote locations, including Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander communities
- $170.2 million for dedicated Medicare
funded and bulk billed pathology tests for COVID-19
- ‘… $101.2 million to educate and
train aged care workers in infection control, and enable aged care providers
to hire extra nurses and aged care workers for both residential and home
care’
-
$500 million in funding for the
states and territories for COVID-19 (already announced 6 March)
-
$30 million from the Medical Research
Future Fund for vaccine, anti-viral and respiratory medicine research
-
$1.1 billion to provide PPE for
patients and critical health care staff and to purchase antibiotics and
antivirals for the National Medical Stockpile, to quickly treat patients who
experience secondary infection because of COVID-19
-
$30 million investment in infection
control training and programs for health and aged care workers and
-
$30 million for a new national communications campaign, providing people with practical
advice on how to contain the virus and stay healthy.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
G Hunt (Minister for Health) and R Colbeck (Minister for Aged Care and Senior
Australians), $2.4
billion health plan to fight COVID-19, media release, 11 March
2020.
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12 March
|
The
Australian Government announced a $17.6 billion economic support
package, which had four parts:
- support for business investment,
including increasing the instant asset
write-off and introducing a 15-month investment incentive
- cash flow assistance for small and
medium businesses through a cash flow boost payment and wage subsidies for
apprentices and trainees
- stimulus payments to households
through a one-off $750 payment to pensioners, veterans and other income
support recipients and
-
assistance of $1 billion to support industries in severely
affected regions.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister)
and J Frydenberg (Treasurer), Economic
stimulus package, media release, 12 March
2020.
Australian Government, Economic
response to the coronavirus, media release, 12 March 2020.
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13 March
|
The Prime
Minister announced:
- ‘Commonwealth, State and Territory
governments have agreed to provide public advice
against holding non-essential, organised public gatherings of more than 500
people from Monday 16th March 2020’.
- The formation of National Cabinet.
Made up of the Prime Minister, premiers and chief ministers, it would meet
weekly to address Australia’s response to the coronavirus.
-
Travel advice for all Australians travelling overseas raised to
‘Level 3: Reconsider your need for travel’.
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S Morrison (Prime Minister),
G Hunt (Minister for Health) and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Advice
on coronavirus, media release, 13 March
2020.
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Press
conference with premiers and chief ministers, Parramatta, transcript, 13 March
2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced a temporary relaxation of the 40-hour per
fortnight limitation for international student visa holders working in
supermarkets (for existing staff in existing roles).
|
A Tudge (Acting Minister for
Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs) and D Tehan (Minister for Education), More
help to keep Aussie shelves stocked, media release,
13 March 2020.
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15 March
|
The first
National Cabinet meeting was held.
The Prime Minister announced that
from midnight a universal precautionary self-isolation requirement on all
international arrivals to Australia would come into effect. All people coming
into Australia would be required to self-isolate for 14 days.
National Cabinet endorsed advice
from the AHPPC to further introduce social distancing measures, including a
ban of non-essential, organised public gatherings of more than 500 people
(not including schools, universities, workplaces or public transport—although
social distancing would still apply in these settings).
Effective as at 11:59 pm, the
Australian Government banned cruise ships from entering Australia from
foreign ports (including international cruises originating in Australia) for
an initial 30 days.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Transcript
of press conference, Sydney, media
release, 15 March 2020.
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Coronavirus
measures endorsed by the National Cabinet, media release, 16 March 2020.
Biosecurity (Human
Biosecurity Emergency) (Human Coronavirus with Pandemic Potential) (Emergency
Requirements) Determination 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government established a business liaison unit in Treasury to
engage with peak business groups on issues relating to coronavirus.
|
J Frydenberg (Treasurer), Government
establishes business liaison unit on coronavirus, media release, 15 March
2020.
|
16 March
|
The RBA
announced that it would expand its purchases of Australian Government bonds
in the secondary market and expand its repo operations to provide liquidity
to Australian financial markets.
|
RBA, Statement
by Philip Lowe, Governor, media release, 16 March
2020.
|
|
The
International Organization for Migration and the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees temporarily suspended resettlement
travel for refugees (meaning arrivals under Australia’s Humanitarian Program
were largely paused).
|
Department of Home Affairs, Refugee
and Humanitarian program’, Department of Home Affairs COVID-19 website, n.d.
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), IOM,
UNHCR announce temporary suspension of resettlement travel for refugees, media
release, 17 March 2020.
|
|
On advice
from the Communicable
Disease Network of Australia, the
Minister for Aged Care and Senior Australians announced that residential aged
care providers were encouraged to limit visits under national guidelines
aimed at the prevention and control of coronavirus.
|
R Colbeck (Minister for Aged
Care and Senior Australians), COVID-19
prevention guidelines issued to aged care providers, media release, 16 March 2020.
|
17 March
|
Building
on the 11 March health announcement, the Minister for Health announced expanded
telehealth provisions. This included expanded capacity for Medicare-funded
telehealth consultations with midwives, where people have had a prior
relationship with a general practice and for consultations with a range of
specialist services.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), Doorstop
interview, Melbourne, media release,
17 March 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government announced that the Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts would convene a roundtable by
teleconference with peak cultural and creative industry bodies to ‘discuss
the impacts of COVID-19 and the applicability to the cultural and creative
sector of support arrangements announced by the Government to date’.
|
P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), Understanding the impact of COVID-19 on our cultural and creative
industries, media
release, 16 March 2020.
|
18 March
|
The Prime Minister announced
that the National Cabinet had accepted the AHPPC advice that ‘non-essential
indoor gatherings of greater than 100 people (including staff) will no longer
be permitted from Wednesday 18 March 2020’.
National
Cabinet further agreed:
- all Australians should only travel
when essential and, if unwell, people must
stay at home, unless seeking medical care
-
Anzac Day ceremonies and events
should be cancelled due to the high proportion of older Australians who
attend such events and
-
to accept the recommendations by the
AHPPC on enhanced arrangements to protect
older Australians in residential aged care facilities and in the community.
- In addition, the following
individuals were banned from entry into aged care facilities:
-
those returned from overseas in the previous 14 days
-
those who had been in contact with a
confirmed case of COVID-19 in the previous 14 days
-
those with fever or symptoms of acute
respiratory infection and
-
those
not vaccinated against influenza (after 1 May).
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media
statement, 18 March 2020.
|
|
The Prime
Minister announced that travel advice was raised to ‘Level 4: Do not travel’
for all overseas destinations.
Australians
overseas who wished to return were advised to do so as soon as possible if
options were available.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media release, 18 March 2020.
DFAT, ‘COVID-19—Travel
advice level changes’, Smartraveller
website.
|
|
The
Minister for Aged Care and Senior Australians announced additional
restrictions for aged care facilities:
Visits should be limited
to two people per resident at one time each day, restricted to rooms, outdoor
or specific areas designated by providers.
Children should not
visit aged care centres at all.
Large group visits or
gatherings, including social activities or entertainment should also be ruled
out until further notice.
|
R Colbeck (Minister for Aged
Care and Senior Australians), Strengthened
guidelines to protect aged care residents, media release, 18 March 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government
announced new COVID‑19 community sport guidelines developed by the
AHPPC.
|
R Colbeck (Minister for
Youth and Sport), COVID-19
community sport guidelines issued to national sporting organisations, media release, 18 March 2020.
|
|
The COAG
Disability Reform Council met by telepresence and ‘discussed a national
response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, particularly its potential
impact on people with disability and the National Disability Insurance Scheme
(NDIS)’.
|
S Robert (Minister for the
National Disability Insurance Scheme), Meeting of the COAG Disability Reform Council, media release, 18 March 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government
announced that:
Aged care providers
will temporarily be able to offer more hours to international students to
ensure the care of senior and vulnerable Australians, as part of the campaign
to combat the impact of coronavirus.
|
A Tudge (Acting Minister for
Population, Cities and Urban Infrastructure) and R Colbeck (Minister for Aged
Care and Senior Australians), International students ready to fill critical staff shortages in
aged care, media release, 18 March 2020.
|
19 March
|
The RBA announced a cut in
the official cash rate to 0.25 per cent and the establishment of a term
funding facility to offer three-year funding to Australian financial
institutions.
|
RBA, Statement
by Philip Lowe, Governor: Monetary policy decision, media release, 19 March 2020.
RBA, Term
funding facility to support lending to Australian businesses, announcement, 19 March 2020.
|
|
To address concerns about
panic buying, the Deputy CMO announced that pharmacists would be required to
limit dispensing of certain prescription products and limit sales of certain
medicines.
|
P Kelly (Deputy CMO), Deputy
Chief Medical Officer's press conference about COVID-19, transcript, 19 March 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced that Australia would close its borders to all
non-citizens and non-residents, taking effect on Friday 20 March 2020.
Only Australian citizens, residents and immediate family members could travel
to Australia (exemptions applied, including for airline crew).
|
S
Morrison (Prime Minister), M Payne (Minister for Foreign Affairs) and P
Dutton (Minister for Home Affairs), Border restrictions, media release, 19 March
2020.
|
20 March
|
The RBA
announced a temporary reciprocal currency arrangement with the US Federal
Reserve and planned to establish further arrangements with other central
banks.
|
RBA, Reserve
Bank of Australia and US Federal Reserve announce swap arrangement, media release, 20 March 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced that it would defer the 2020–21 Budget until
6 October 2020. To deal with the ongoing economic impact of the
coronavirus, the debt ceiling would be lifted from $600 billion to $850 billion.
|
J Frydenberg (Treasurer) and
M Cormann (Minister for Finance), 2020–21
budget announcement, media release, 20 March 2020.
|
|
As agreed
by National Cabinet, the Australian Government announced risk mitigation
measures for:
- non-essential indoor gatherings of fewer than 100 people
-
outdoor events of fewer than 500
attendees and
- early learning and child care centres (provided by the AHPPC).
The
Australian Government also announced an additional $444.6 million in
funding for four temporary measures to support the aged care workforce.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media
statement, 20 March 2020.
|
21 March
|
The
Minister for Health announced that the Australian Government was ‘investing
more than $2.6 million in cutting-edge diagnostics research at the Peter
Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, to tackle the evolving novel
coronavirus health emergency’. This funding was part of the $30 million
for research announced by the Government on 11 March as part of the $2.4 billion
COVID-19 Health Plan. It was funded through the Medical Research Future Fund.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health), $2.6 million for coronavirus research, including a
new simpler Australian pathology test, media release, 21 March 2020.
|
|
The Minister for Health
announced the commencement of two grant opportunities totalling $13 million
to fast-track research into treatments for COVID-19. This funding was part of
the $30 million for research announced by the Government on 11 March
as part of the $2.4 billion COVID-19 Health Plan. It was funded through
the Medical Research Future Fund.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Fast-tracking research into treatments for COVID‑19, media release, 21 March 2020.
|
22 March
|
The Australian Government
announced a second economic support package, bringing additional support of around
$66 billion. The additional measures included:
-
support for workers and households
through the coronavirus supplement of $550 per fortnight that would be paid
to ‘both existing and new recipients of the JobSeeker Payment, Youth
Allowance jobseeker, Parenting Payment, Farm Household Allowance and Special
Benefit’
-
support to households through a
second $750 payment to social security and
veteran income support recipients and eligible concession card holders
-
early release of superannuation
($10,000 in 2019–20 and a further $10,000 in 2020–21) for those experiencing
financial hardship
-
temporary reduction of the minimum
superannuation minimum drawdown requirements
-
a lower social security deeming rate
- an increase in the existing cash flow
boost for small businesses and announcement of a second cash flow boost
payment
-
a guarantee scheme for small business
loans and
- additional support of up to $715 million for the aviation
industry.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister)
and J Frydenberg (Treasurer), Supporting
Australian workers and businesses, media release, 22 March
2020.
|
22 March
|
National
Cabinet implemented new Stage 1 restrictions on social gatherings. Coming
into effect from midday local time 23 March 2020, and expected to be in
place for at least 6 months, the following facilities were restricted
from opening:
- Pubs, registered and
licenced clubs (excluding bottle shops attached to these venues), hotels
(excluding accommodation)
- Gyms and indoor
sporting venues
- Cinemas,
entertainment venues, casinos, and night clubs
- Restaurants and
cafes will be restricted to takeaway and/or home delivery
-
Religious
gatherings, places of worship or funerals (in enclosed spaces and other than
very small groups and where the 1 person per 4 square metre rule
applies).
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media
statement, 22 March 2020.
|
|
The Prime Minister
announced that non-essential travel in Australia should be avoided.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Transcript
of press conference, Australian Parliament House, media release, 22 March 2020.
|
23 March
|
The
Coronavirus Economic Response Package Omnibus Bill 2020 passed in the
Australian Parliament.
|
Coronavirus
Economic Response Package Omnibus Bill 2020.
|
|
The
Minister for Health announced a further
expansion of telehealth services, allowing all vulnerable general
practitioners and other vulnerable health professionals who were currently
authorised to use telehealth item numbers to use telehealth for all
consultations with all of their patients.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health), Expansion of telehealth services, media release, 23 March 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government
announced legislation that would help with the cost of child care and provide
support to child care centres during COVID-19 closures.
Amendments to the
legislation allowed the Minister for Education to:
- increase the number of days that a
family can continue to claim the Child Care Subsidy in cases where a child is
absent from child care for more than the currently allowable 42 days
- give a family access to additional
absences, without the need for evidence, in relation to COVID-19
- waive the current obligation of child
care services to require a family to pay gap fees if the service is forced to
close.
|
D Tehan (Minister for
Education), Supporting families and children using child care, media release, 23 March 2020.
|
24 March
|
The Minister for Families
and Social Services announced that eligibility for the fortnightly $550
coronavirus supplement would be extended to ‘students who receive Youth
Allowance (Student), AUSTUDY and ABSTUDY (Living Allowance)’.
|
A Ruston (Minister for
Families and Social Services), Supporting
students through the effects of coronavirus, media release, 24 March 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced that mutual obligation requirements for
jobseekers would be lifted until 31 March 2020.
|
M Cash (Minister for
Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business) and A Ruston (Minister for
Families and Social Services), Mutual obligations lifted until congestion clears, media release, 24 March 2020.
|
|
The immigration
detention visitor program was temporarily ceased.
|
Department of Home Affairs,
‘Immigration
detention’, Department of Home Affairs
website, n.d.
|
|
Under the Commonwealth’s Biosecurity
Act 2015, the Prime Minister announced a travel ban on Australians
travelling overseas commencing 12pm on 25 March 2020 (exemptions were possible
for some categories of traveller).
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media
statement, 24 March 2020.
Biosecurity (Human
Biosecurity Emergency) (Human Coronavirus with Pandemic Potential) (Overseas
Travel Ban Emergency Requirements) Determination 2020.
|
|
The Prime Minister announced
that National Cabinet agreed to new and enhanced social distancing measures
that would apply from 11:59pm (local time) 25 March 2020. Tighter
restrictions related to weddings, funerals, fitness classes, beauty salons,
arcades, play centres and more.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media
statement, 24 March 2020.
|
25 March
|
The Prime Minister announced
that on the advice of the AHPPC, all non-urgent elective surgery—in both the
public and private health systems—would be temporarily suspended. Category 1
and some exceptional Category 2 surgery would continue until further
notice.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Elective
surgery, media release, 25 March
2020.
|
|
The Prime
Minister announced that National Cabinet agreed to an AHPPC recommendation to
expand coronavirus testing criteria. The updated testing criteria was the
minimum requirement—states and territories could expand testing criteria at
their discretion and if they had the capacity.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
National
Cabinet update, media release,
25 March 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government created
the new National COVID-19 Coordination Commission to ‘coordinate advice to
the Australian Government on actions to anticipate and mitigate the economic
and social effects of the global coronavirus pandemic’.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
National
COVID-19 Coordination Commission, media
release, 25 March 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced:
… every Australian mobile phone
will be sent a text message from the Australian Government with important
steps each person can take to protect their own health, the health of their
families and the health of the whole community from the coronavirus.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health),
B Murphy (Australian Government CMO) and P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), Australian Government text message regarding Coronavirus
prevention steps,
media release, 25 March 2020.
|
26 March
|
Under the
Commonwealth’s Biosecurity Act 2015, the Minister for Health announced
travel restrictions into certain remote areas to protect vulnerable
Australians. Anyone travelling to designated areas would need to self-isolate
for 14 days prior to entry.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and K Wyatt (Minister for Indigenous Australians), Travel
restrictions for remote areas commence tonight, media release, 26 March 2020.
|
27 March
|
The Prime
Minister announced that all travellers arriving in Australia would be
required to undertake their mandatory 14-day self-isolation at designated
facilities (e.g. hotels).
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media
release, 27 March 2020.
|
29 March
|
As agreed
by National Cabinet, the Prime Minister announced updated COVID-19 measures,
including indoor and outdoor gatherings limited to two persons only and
evictions put on hold for six months by the states and territories for
commercial and residential tenancies.
The
Australian Government released the Coronavirus Australia app and the WhatsApp
channel to:
… provide a trusted source of
information for Australian looking for important advice on how they can
protect themselves and others, current restrictions on social gathers, how
they can access support and the latest data on Australian cases.
(These platforms differed from
the COVIDSafe app, which the Government launched on 26 April 2020.)
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
National
Cabinet statement, media release, 29 March 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced $1.1 billion in funding to expand mental
health and telehealth services, increase domestic violence services and
provide more emergency food relief. This included:
-
$669 million to expand
Medicare-subsidised telehealth services for all Australians until 30 September 2020, when they would be reviewed
- $150 million ‘to support Australians
experiencing domestic, family and sexual violence due to the fallout from
coronavirus’
- $74 million for a range of mental
health supports and
- $200 million to support charities and
other community organisations which provide
emergency and food relief.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M Payne (Minister for Women), G Hunt (Minister for Health) and A Ruston
(Minister for Families and Social Services), $1.1 billion to support more mental health, Medicare and domestic
violence services,
media release, 29 March 2020.
|
30 March
|
The Australian
Government announced the $130 billion JobKeeper wage subsidy payments.
Further
details on the JobKeeper Payment (and all aspects of the Australian Government’s economic
response) are available from the Treasury’s
website: Economic
response to the coronavirus.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister)
and J Frydenberg (Treasurer), $130 billion
JobKeeper payment to keep Australians in a job, media release, 30 March
2020.
The Treasury, ‘JobKeeper
Payment’, The Treasury website.
|
|
The
Government advised all Australians to stay home unless shopping for
essentials, receiving medical care, exercising or travelling to work or
education. In addition, people aged over 70, aged over 60 with pre-existing
conditions, or Indigenous people aged over 50 were advised to stay home
wherever possible for their own protection.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media release,
30 March 2020.
|
31 March
|
The
Minister for Health announced that the Australian Government approved
temporary changes to medicines regulation. These changes would ‘improve
access to medicines, reduce the burden on GPs and support social distancing
and self-isolation’ and ‘ensure Australians can continue to access the
Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) medicines they need, as the COVID-19
outbreak unfolds’.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), Ensuring
continued access to medicines during the COVID-19 pandemic, media release, 31 March
2020.
|
|
The Australian Government
announced a partnership with the private hospital sector. Securing 30,000
hospital beds and 105,000 nurses and staff, the partnership was to ensure the
health system was ready to treat patients through the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), N Coatsworth (Australian Deputy CMO) and A McMillan (Australian
Chief Nursing and Midwifery Officer), Australian Government partnership with private health sector
secures 30,000 hospital beds and 105,000 nurses and staff, to help fight
COVID-19 pandemic, media release, 31 March 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government
announced $59.3 million in additional funding for Meals on Wheels and
similar programs to support senior Australians who were urged to follow
COVID-19 restrictions and stay home.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
G Hunt (Minister for Health) and R Colbeck (Minister for Aged Care and Senior
Australians), Meals
on Wheels program reinforced to help senior Australians at home, media release, 31 March
2020.
|
April 2020
|
|
|
1 April
|
The Minister for Regional
Health, Regional Communications and Local Government announced the opening of
the first GP-led rural respiratory clinic in Emerald, Queensland. The clinic
was ‘established as part of the Australian Government’s $2.4 billion health
package to respond to the COVID-19 outbreak …’
|
M Coulton (Minister for
Regional Health, Regional Communications and Local Government), E McPhee
(President of the Australian College of Rural and Remote Medicine) and J Hall
(President of the Rural Doctors Association of Australia), First
rural COVID-19 respiratory clinic opens, media release, 1 April 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government recommended
all Australians, especially those in vulnerable groups or age brackets, to
arrange vaccination against seasonal influenza during the month of April.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian CMO), Flu vaccination more important than ever during the month of April, media release, 1 April 2020.
|
2 April
|
The Australian Government announced the Early Childhood
and Care Relief Package, which covered up to 50 per cent of fee revenue for
childcare centres if families were not charged fees.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister)
and D Tehan (Minister for Education), Early
Childhood Education and Care Relief Package, media release, 2 April
2020.
|
|
The Australian Government launched a new Jobs Hub to highlight
opportunities for Australians to access new employment.
|
M Cash (Minister for
Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business), New
jobs hub highlighting job opportunities for Australians, media release, 2 April 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government
announced funding for up to 20,000 new online education places for Registered
Nurses (RNs). The online training would allow experienced RNs ‘to assist in
the delivery of care in intensive care and high dependency units across
Australia’ and ‘to be used to maximum effect in the national response to the
COVID-19 pandemic’.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and A McMillan (Australian Chief Nursing and Midwifery Officer), Training
more nurses for critical care, media release, 2 April 2020.
|
3 April
|
For continuity of education during the COVID‑19
pandemic, the Minister for Education announced that the Australian Government
would provide $453.2 million in funding in 2021 to support almost 350,000
children to access preschool.
|
D Tehan (Minister for
Education), Preschool
funding guaranteed for 2021, media
release, 3 April 2020.
|
|
The Prime Minister announced
that during the Easter period, places of worship would be considered places
of work, but must remain closed to the public. Services would be streamed and
only clergy and those formally involved in services or streaming were
permitted to attend.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media
statement, 3 April 2020.
|
|
The
Minister for Government Services announced a temporary pause for an initial period
of six months on Services Australia’s debt raising and recovery activity ‘to
help ease pressure on people’s budgets during the coronavirus pandemic’.
|
S Robert (Minister for
Government Services), Pausing
debt activity during the coronavirus pandemic, media release, 3 April
2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced the establishment of an advisory group to ‘guide
development and implementation of a response plan focusing on the unique
health needs of people with disability during the coronavirus pandemic’.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health),
A Ruston (Minister for Families and Social Services) and S Robert (Minister
for the National Disability Insurance Scheme), Immediate response plan to focus on people with disability during
coronavirus, media release, 3 April 2020.
|
|
The Minister for Finance
announced $800 million, provided to the Department of Health from the
Advance to the Finance Minister, to ‘fund the further procurement of masks
and other emergency medical or emergency health equipment to deal with the
impact of COVID-19 in Australia’.
This Advance to the Finance
Minister determination was in addition to previously issued Advance
determinations of $100 million (issued on 4 March 2020) and
$200 million (issued on 9 March 2020) to fund procurement for the
National Medical Stockpile.
|
M Cormann (Minister for
Finance), Advances
to the Finance Minister in the week ending Friday 3 April 2020, media release, 3 April 2020.
|
4 April
|
The
Minister for Health announced that the National COVID-19 Clinical Evidence
Taskforce would receive $1.5 million in funding from the Medical Research
Future Fund, saying that:
The Taskforce will analyse
emerging national and international research and data on COVID-19 to provide
frontline health care workers with the most up-to-date information and advice
on the disease in a rapidly evolving environment.
This funding was in addition
to the $2.4 billion Coronavirus National Health Plan.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), $1.5 million to support clinical management of COVID‑19, media
release, 4 April 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government
announced a $220 million upgrade to CSIRO’s high containment biosecurity
research facility in Geelong. Formerly known as the Australian Animal Health
Laboratory, the facility was renamed the Australian Centre for Disease
Preparedness.
The Government also
committed up to $10 million to support CSIRO’s work to help secure a
vaccine for COVID-19.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and K Andrews (Minister for Industry, Science and technology), CSIRO upgrading world class facility to fight diseases like
coronavirus, media release, 4 April 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced changes to temporary visa holder arrangements
during the COVID-19 pandemic, which included:
- access to their Australian
superannuation, in line with changes made for Australian citizens and
permanent residents
- from 1 May international students
working extended hours in major supermarkets would see their hours returned
to the maximum 40 hours a fortnight as more Australians were recruited into
these roles
- temporary skilled visa holders who had
been stood down, but not laid off, maintained their visa validity
-
businesses could reduce the hours of
the visa holder without the person being in breach of their visa conditions
-
if a 4-year temporary skilled visa
holder was re-employed after the pandemic, time already spent in Australia
would count towards their permanent residency skilled work experience
requirements
- Working Holiday Makers (WHMs) in the
critical sectors of heath, aged and disability care, agriculture and food
processing and childcare, would be exempt from the six month work limitation
with the one employer and eligible for a further visa to keep working in
critical sectors if their current visa was due to expire in the next six
months. They were required to self-isolate for a period of 14 days before
transferring to another part of the country
-
workers who were in Australia under
the Pacific Labour Scheme and Seasonal Worker Programme could remain in
Australia for up to 12 months to work for approved employers and
- WHMs, Pacific and Seasonal workers
and other temporary workers employed in critical sectors were potentially
eligible for a Temporary Activity (subclass 408 Australian Government
Endorsed Event stream) visa.
The Government strongly encouraged
temporary visa holders to return home if they were unable to support
themselves in Australia under these arrangements.
|
A Tudge (Acting Minister for
Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs), Coronavirus
and temporary visa holders, media
release, 4 April 2020.
M McCormack (Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development), D Littleproud
(Minister for Water Resources, Drought, Rural Finance, National Disaster and
Emergency Management) and A Tudge (Acting Minister for Immigration,
Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs), Supporting
the agriculture workforce during COVID-19, media release, 4 April 2020.
M Payne (Minister for Foreign
Affairs) and A Hawke (Minister for International Development and the
Pacific), Australia supporting Pacific workers, media release, 4 April 2020.
Department of Home Affairs,
‘COVID-19 and the border’,
Department of Home Affairs website.
Migration (LIN
20/122: COVID-19 Pandemic event for Subclass 408 (Temporary Activity) visa
and visa application charge for Temporary Activity (Class GG) visa)
Instrument 2020.
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Transcript
of press conference, Australian Parliament House, media release, 3 April 2020.
|
6 April
|
The
Acting Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and
Multicultural Affairs announced that citizenship ceremonies would be held
online via secure video link for those already approved for Australian
citizenship. Although Australian citizenship applications were still being
accepted, citizenship interviews and testing were put on hold.
|
A Tudge (Acting Minister for
Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs), Statement
on Australian citizenship processing, media release,
6 April 2020.
|
7 April
|
The
Australian Government released the Impact
of COVID-19: Theoretical Modelling of how the Health System can Respond plan that modelled possible scenarios of COVID-19 spreading
through the population to inform the response of the Australian Government
and medical experts to slow the spread and prepare the health system.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media release,
7 April 2020.
DoH, ‘Modelling
how COVID-19 could affect Australia’, DoH
website, 8 April 2020.
|
|
National
Cabinet agreed that states and territories would implement a mandatory Code
of Conduct for commercial tenancies.
|
National Cabinet, Mandatory
Code of Conduct: SME commercial leasing principles during COVID-19, National Cabinet, 7 April 2020.
|
8 April
|
The
Minister for Aged Care and Senior Australians announced that to ensure their
wellbeing, senior Australians who deferred aged care home services during the
COVID-19 pandemic could receive welfare checks through phone calls.
|
R Colbeck (Minister for Aged
Care and Senior Australians), Welfare checks to ensure the wellbeing of Senior Australians, media release, 8 April 2020.
|
|
The
$130 billion JobKeeper Payment passed the Australian Parliament.
|
J Frydenberg (Treasurer), $130 billion JobKeeper payment passes the Parliament, media release, 8 April 2020.
|
9 April
|
The
Australian Government announced more than $154 million in additional support
for Australians living with a disability or experiencing domestic and family
violence and families impacted by the coronavirus outbreak.
|
A Ruston (Minister for
Families and Social Services) and S Robert (Minister for the National
Disability Insurance Scheme), Supporting Australians most at risk in the wake of coronavirus, media release, 9 April 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced $27 million in support for the arts sector to deal with the impact of
COVID-19. The Government would provide:
-
$10 million delivered through Regional Arts Australia’s Regional Arts
Fund ‘to help regional artists and organisations develop new work and explore
new delivery models’
-
$7 million delivered under the
Indigenous Visual Arts Fund to support Indigenous artists and art centres and
-
$10 million to the industry charity
organisation, Support Act, to continue its work across the arts sector.
|
M McCormack (Deputy Prime
Minister, Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development)
and P Fletcher (Minister for Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts),
Targeted support for Indigenous Arts, Regional Arts and respected
charity Support Act,
media release, 9 April 2020.
|
|
The
Minister for Health announced $10 million in funding (over 2 years) to
support Beyond Blue’s Coronavirus Mental
Wellbeing Support Service, a free 24/7 service to help people through the
COVID-19 pandemic.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), Free coronavirus wellbeing support service, media release, 9 April 2020.
|
|
The Prime Minister announced
that National Cabinet agreed to implement:
- a quarantine exemption for non-cruise
maritime crew to transit to and from their places of work
-
revised advice from the AHPPC in
relation to air crew quarantine exemptions and
-
a nationally consistent approach to
hardship support across the essential services, such as utilities and local
council services, for households and small businesses.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media
statement, 9 April 2020.
|
12 April
|
The Australian
Government announced the Higher Education Relief Package. Measures included
reducing costs for short, online courses from universities and private
providers to help Australians retrain (beginning in May for an initial six
months); maintaining funding for universities at current levels, even if
there is a fall in domestic student numbers; and greater flexibility in the
use of these funds.
|
D Tehan (Minister for
Education) and M Cash (Minister for Employment, Skills, Small and Family
Business) Higher
education relief package, media
release, 12 April 2020.
|
13 April
|
The
Minister for Health announced a further $3 million allocated by the
Australian Government to support frontline health workers with training and
information to ‘support the treatment of patients with coronavirus’.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health),
$3 million to boost the national coordinated coronavirus response, media release, 13 April 2020.
|
15 April
|
The
Australian Government announced the first rural GP-led COVID-19 respiratory
clinic in NSW officially opened in Wagga Wagga.
|
M McCormack (Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development) and M Coulton
(Minister for Regional Health, Regional Communications and Local Government),
First regional COVID-19 respiratory clinic opens in Wagga Wagga, media release, 15 April 2020.
|
16 April
|
The
Australian Government announced a $3.3 million investment to ‘establish
a rapid coronavirus Remote Point of Care Testing Program for remote and rural
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities’.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), K Wyatt (Minister for Indigenous Australians) and M Coulton
(Minister for Regional Health, Regional Communications and Local Government) Rapid COVID-19 testing to protect Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander communities,
media release, 16 April 2020.
|
|
National
Cabinet agreed to AHPPC advice, outlining seven conditions that would need to
be in place to start relaxing coronavirus measures.
National
Cabinet also agreed to a series of National Principles for School Education
and endorsed the Management and Operational Plan for COVID-19 for People with
Disability—released on the Department of Health’s website.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media
statement, 16 April 2020.
DoH, Management
and operational plan for people with disability: Australian health sector
emergency response plan for novel coronavirus (COVID‑19), April 2020.
|
18 April
|
The
Minister for Health announced that the Australian Government received 58
million protective face masks to ‘help provide essential protection for
frontline health workers at risk of COVID-19’.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), 58 million face masks arrive to protect health workers from COVID-19, media release, 18 April 2020.
|
21 April
|
The
Australian Government announced that elective surgery restrictions would be
eased from 27 April.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health), B
Murphy (Australian CMO) and N Coatsworth (Deputy CMO), Elective
surgery restrictions eased, media release, 21 April
2020.
|
|
The Prime Minister
announced that to continue to suppress COVID-19, National Cabinet ‘commenced
further work on Australia’s public health response including enhanced
testing, tracing and local health response capabilities’.
|
S
Morrison (Prime Minster), Update
on coronavirus measures, media statement,
21 April 2020.
|
22 April
|
The
Australian Government announced that the lifting of mutual obligations for
job seekers would continue until 22 May 2020.
|
M Cash (Minister for
Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business) and A Ruston (Minister for
Families and Social Services), COVID-19
mutual obligation arrangements: further extension of suspension and
assistance to job seekers, media
release, 22 April 2020.
|
|
The
Minister for Aged Care and Senior Australians announced a free call support
line for seniors, their families and carers to support their mental health
during the COVID-19 outbreak.
|
R Colbeck (Minister for Aged
Care and Senior Australians), Free
COVID-19 support line for Senior Australians, media release, 22 April 2020.
|
|
The
Minister for Energy and Emissions Reduction announced that Australia
established its first government-owned oil reserves for domestic fuel
security. Also announced was a deal with the United States to store
Australian owned crude oil in its Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
|
A Taylor (Minister for
Energy and Emissions Reduction), Australia
to boost fuel security and establish national oil reserve, media release, 22 April 2020.
|
23 April
|
The
Minister for Agriculture, Drought and Emergency Management announced that at
the virtual G20 meeting of Agricultural Ministers, Australia called for
international experts to scrutinise wildlife wet markets.
|
D Littleproud (Minister for
Agriculture, Drought and Emergency Management), Australia
calls for action on wildlife wet markets, media release, 23 April 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced the establishment of a network of 15 air
freight service providers and freight forwarders to accelerate delivery of
agricultural and fisheries exports into key overseas markets.
|
M McCormack (Deputy Prime
Minister and Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development),
S Birmingham (Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment), D Littleproud
(Minister for Agriculture, Drought and Emergency Management) and J Duniam
(Assistant Minister for Forestry and Fisheries), New
air freight network to boost agricultural and fisheries exports, media release, 23 April 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced that international students studying relevant
medical courses would be exempt from the 40‑hour per fortnight work
limit if they worked in support of coronavirus health efforts or for
registered disability services providers.
|
A Tudge (Acting Minister for
Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs), G Hunt
(Minister for Health) and S Robert (Minister for the National Disability
Insurance Scheme), Boosting
health and disability worker numbers during the coronavirus, media release, 23 April 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced the launch and funding of the Critical Health
Resource Information System, to operate nationally in all public and private
hospitals with Intensive Care Units.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and N Coatsworth (Deputy CMO), COVID-19:
rapid response boost for Australia's intensive care units, media release, 23 April 2020.
|
24 April
|
The
Prime Minister announced that National Cabinet met and noted that the suppression strategy for the virus was working.
It outlined new measures, which included:
- expanded testing criteria across
Australia to all people with mild symptoms of COVID-19
-
updated directions based on AHPPC
advice concerning schools, masks and sport and
-
development of
‘nationally-consistent, industry-specific work health and safety guidance on
COVID-19, accessible via a central hub provided by Safe Work Australia’.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister), Update
on coronavirus measures, media
release, 24 April 2020.
|
|
The
Treasurer provided a JobKeeper update, clarifying the operation of the rules.
Clarification or changes to the rules were outlined for:
- employees employed through a special
purpose entity, rather than an operating entity
- charities and the treatment of
government revenue
-
religious practitioners, allowing
JobKeeper Payments to be made to religious institutions in respect of
religious practitioners
-
the ‘one in, all in’ principle
-
full time students aged 16 and 17
years old
- International Aid Organisations and
- universities.
|
J Frydenberg (Treasurer), JobKeeper
update, media release, 24 April
2020.
|
|
The
Minister for Health announced additional funding of $6 million for drug and
alcohol services. Funding was to be rolled out by 30 June and directed
to online and phone support services for people experiencing drug and alcohol
problems.
The
minister also announced:
… the National
Organisation for Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (NOFASD) Australia will
deliver a COVID-19 Alcohol and Pregnancy campaign addressing increased alcohol consumption leading to
unplanned alcohol-exposed (FASD) pregnancies during the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health),
Additional
$6 million to support drug and alcohol services during COVID‑19, media release, 24 April 2020.
|
|
The Minister for Communications,
Cyber Safety and the Arts announced that applications were opened for the $5
million Regional and Small Publishers Innovation Fund 2020 Round,
fast-tracked to assist regional and metropolitan news publishers with the
significant challenges they faced as a result of COVID-19.
|
P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), Supporting
public interest journalism, media
release, 24 April 2020.
|
26 April
|
The Australian
Government launched the COVIDSafe app.
The Minister for
Health stated he had issued a new determination under the Biosecurity Act
2015, ensuring information provided through the app would only be
accessible to authorised health officials in each state and territory, with
any other access or use a criminal offense.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health), Press
conference, Canberra, transcript,
26 April 2020.
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
G Hunt (Minister for Health), S Robert (Minister for Government
Services), B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), COVIDSafe:
New app to slow the spread of coronavirus, media release, 26 April 2020.
|
27 April
|
The
Assistant Treasurer announced a JobKeeper payment extension for ‘businesses
suffering from a significant reduction in turnover due to COVID-19’.
Businesses had until 8 May 2020 to ensure eligible employees ‘received a
minimum of $3,000 in gross wages for the first two fortnights of the
JobKeeper support period’.
|
M Sukkar (Assistant
Treasurer), JobKeeper
payment extension to help business cashflow, media release, 27 April 2020.
|
|
The
Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme announced ‘further
initiatives to support NDIS participants and providers during the coronavirus
pandemic’. This included:
- flexible use of existing NDIS funding
to enable participants’ access to disability supports through telehealth and
telepractice through the purchase of low-cost assistive technology, including
smart devices
- new support items for Supported
Independent Living providers, if a participant was diagnosed with the coronavirus
and
- downloadable ‘Access Request’ and
‘Supporting Evidence’ forms available on the NDIS website.
|
S Robert (Minister for the
National Disability Insurance Scheme), Further
initiatives to support NDIS participants and providers during coronavirus
pandemic, media release, 27 April
2020.
|
|
The
Minister for Education announced an additional $27 million in grants of up to
$10,000 for childcare services to continue providing care to the children of
essential workers.
|
D Tehan (Minister for
Education), More
support for child care services and children, media release, 27 April 2020.
|
28 April
|
The
Australian Government announced a $94.6 million support package to help
zoos and aquariums remain viable through the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
M McCormack (Deputy Prime
Minister and Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional
Development), S Birmingham (Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment)
and S Ley (Minister for the Environment), Funding
lifeline for Australia's zoos and aquariums, media release, 28 April 2020.
|
|
The Australian
Government released an economic update on the impacts of the coronavirus,
announcing that government support for the economy totalled $320 billion
(16.4 per cent of the GDP).
|
J Frydenburg (Treasurer) and
M Cormann (Minister for Finance), Update
on the economic impacts from the coronavirus, media release, 28 April 2020.
|
29 April
|
The
Australian Government announced that in partnership with Minderoo Foundation
and private pathology providers, Australia secured an additional 10 million
COVID-19 test kits and pathology equipment to be installed across the
country.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and B Murphy (Australian Government CMO), Ground
breaking partnership delivers 10 million COVID-19 tests and equipment, media release, 29 April 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced ‘$1 million in grants for community
organisations to provide digital devices to older Australians through the Be
Connected program’.
|
A Ruston (Minister for
Families and Social Services) and P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), Supporting
isolated older Australians during coronavirus, media release, 29 April 2020.
|
30 April
|
The
Australian Government announced that members of the Australian Defence Force
(ADF) and an Australian Medical Assistance Team had finished their support at
Burnie’s North West Region Hospital following a COVID-19 outbreak amongst the
hospital’s staff. It was the first time the ADF had been called on to help
operate a domestic hospital.
|
L Reynolds (Minister for
Defence) and G Hunt (Minister for
Health), ADF
and AUSMAT complete support to North West Regional Hospital, media release, 30 April 2020.
|
|
The
Assistant Minister for Regional Development and Territories announced
economic support for Norfolk Island businesses and residents affected by
COVID-19. In addition to Jobseeker and special child care relief, Norfolk
Island businesses were given additional time to obtain an Australian Business
Number, allowing them to access to JobKeeper for eligible employees.
|
N Marino (Assistant Minister
for Regional Development and Territories), Supporting
the Norfolk Island economy through COVID-19, media release, 30 April 2020.
|
May 2020
|
|
|
1 May
|
The
Australian Government announced that following the development of the national principles for clinical education during the COVID-19
pandemic, medical
students would be deployed in hospitals nationally.
To employ
some of the 3,600 final-year medical students in health care roles, a new,
paid medical assistant role would also be created.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and D Tehan (Minister for Education), Medical
students to join the fight against COVID‑19, media release, 1 May 2020.
Department of Education,
Skills and Employment (DESE), ‘National
principles for clinical education during the COVID-19 pandemic’, DESE website.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced a freeze on the Heavy Vehicle Road User
Charge at current levels ‘to support freight operators working hard to keep
shelves stocked and essential goods moving during the COVID-19 pandemic’.
|
M McCormack (Minister for Infrastructure,
Transport and Regional Development) and S Bucholz (Assistant Minister
for Road Safety and Freight Transport), Continued
support for truckies to keep Australia moving during COVID-19, media release, 1 May 2020.
|
|
The
Minister for Agriculture, Drought and Emergency Management announced that the
Australian Chief Veterinary Officer sought to unite member countries of the
World Organisation for Animal Health to deliver reforms on wildlife markets
globally. This was in response to the ‘COVID-19 virus’, thought to have
originated in a wildlife market, and the potential for zoonotic and pandemic
pathogens to emerge in these markets.
|
D Littleproud (Minister for
Agriculture, Drought and Emergency Management), A
united approach to wildlife markets,
media release, 1 May 2020.
|
|
The Prime Minister announced that
National Cabinet met and endorsed:
- the draft Code of Conduct on Pandemic
Procedures for the aged care sector
- the National Principles for the
Resumption of Sport and Recreation Activities and
-
updated AHPPC advice on the fifteen
conditions needed before relaxing restrictions.
National Cabinet also brought
forward the review of the first phase of removing baseline restrictions to 8
May 2020.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister), Update
on coronavirus measures, media
release, 1 May 2020.
|
|
To
ensure childcare services receiving support under the Early Childhood Education
and Care Relief Package but which are not eligible for JobKeeper payments are
able to remain open, the Australian Government expanded the eligibility for
additional supplementary payments.
|
D Tehan (Minister for
Education), Ensuring
more child care services remain open and viable, media release, 1 May 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced an additional COVID-19 specific support
package totalling $205 million for residential aged care providers, bringing
the total COVID-19 specific Australian Government funding for aged care to
more than $850 million.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister) and R Colbeck
(Minister for Aged Care and Senior Australians), New
COVID-19 payment to keep senior Australians in residential aged care safe, media release, 1 May 2020.
|
|
The Australian
Government launched a new online toolkit on the Safe Work Australia website
‘to provide detailed guidance for businesses and workers on how to stay safe
from COVID-19’.
|
C Porter (Minister for
Industrial relations) and M Cash (Minister for Employment, Skills, Small and
Family Business), New
toolkit to help businesses get back to work safely, media release, 1 May 2020.
|
2 May
|
The
Minister for the Environment announced that under the Australian Government’s
flagship heritage program, 29 successful applications would receive up to
$5.3 million in funding to ensure conservation of significant natural and
cultural heritage continued during the threat of coronavirus.
|
S Ley (Minister for the
Environment), New
funding to conserve and protect national heritage areas, media release, 2 May 2020.
|
3 May
|
The Australian
Government launched a new domestic violence awareness campaign: Help is
Here. As part of the Government’s $150 million Domestic Violence Support
Package, the campaign included advertising
across television, digital, social media, radio, magazines and newspapers as
well as in shopping centres, hospitals and GP surgeries. The campaign would
also promote the two national
helplines—1800RESPECT and MensLine
Australia.
|
M
Payne (Minister for Women), A Ruston (Minister for Families and Social
Services), Campaign
to combat domestic violence during COVID-19 crisis, media
release, 3 May 2020
|
4 May
|
As part of its
Higher Education Relief Package, the Australian Government facilitated the
roll-out of a suite of six-month online courses in nursing, teaching,
counselling, IT and allied health, designed to help unemployed Australians
gain new qualifications during lockdown.
|
D Tehan (Minister for
Education), Short
courses now available to upskill Australians, media release, 4 May 2020.
|
|
The Australian
Government welcomed a new short course developed by the new Australian Industry
Skills Emergency Response Sub-Committee in response to COVID-19. The course
delivered an infection control skillset to allow Australians to quickly
qualify to stop the spread of germs in the workplace.
|
M Cash (Minister for
Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business), Fast
tracking the upskilling of Australian workers on COVID-19 safety, media release, 4 May 2020.
|
5 May
|
National
Cabinet met to discuss options for easing restrictions over the coming months
and:
- encouraged Australians to download
the COVIDSafe app
- agreed that Safe Work Australia would be the single
source of information on returning to work safely
- agreed to establish a three-step
framework, to be determined on 8 May 2020, to gradually remove baseline
restrictions to enable Australians to live in a COVID-19 safe economy and
-
announced funding for the legal
assistance sector, with $49.8 million for additional frontline legal services
and $13.5 million for IT costs to support the sector’s transition to
delivering assistance virtually and online.
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda
Ardern joined the National Cabinet meeting to discuss approaches to combating
COVID-19 and a trans-Tasman COVID-19 safe travel zone.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister), Update
on coronavirus measures, media statement, 5 May 2020.
|
|
The
Treasurer announced changes to businesses’ legal obligations to make it
easier for them to operate during COVID-19. These changes allowed company
boards to:
- provide notice of annual general
meetings to shareholders using email;
- achieve a quorum with shareholders
attending online; and
-
hold annual general meetings online.
|
J Frydenberg (Treasurer), Making
it easier for business to operate during COVID‑19, media release, 5 May 2020.
|
|
The Minster for Regional
Health, Regional Communications and Local Government announced ‘Australia’s
first regional Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Service-led GP
respiratory clinic opened in Toowoomba to provide locals with [a] culturally
safe place to be tested and treated for COVID-19’ to take pressure off
hospital emergency departments and GP clinics in the region.
|
M Coulton (Minister for
Regional Health, Regional Communications and Local Government), Australia’s
first regional Aboriginal-led COVID clinic opens in Toowoomba, media release, 5 May 2020.
|
|
The Minister for Communications,
Cyber Safety and the Arts announced that the Australian Government would
contribute $100,000 towards the 2020 Australia Reads and Australia Reads at
Home campaigns to promote literacy, connection and wellbeing during COVID-19.
|
P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), Government
support for Australia Reads, media release,
5 May 2020.
|
6 May
|
The Australian Government welcomed
the announcement from biopharmaceutical company CSL Behring that Australia
would be one of the first countries to produce COVID-19 Immunoglobin, a
plasma-derived treatment for people with COVID-19.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), COVID-19:
potentially lifesaving immunoglobulin treatment for seriously ill Australians, media release, 6 May 2020.
|
|
In response to
COVID-19, the Assistant Minister for Finance, Charities and Electoral Matters
announced the amendment of ministerial guidelines for public and private
ancillary funds, in support of Australia’s philanthropic sector.
|
Z Seselja (Assistant
Minister for Finance, Charities and Electoral Matters), Incentivising
increased support for charities in response to COVID-19, media release, 6 May 2020.
|
|
The Australian
Government announced support, made available through the $1 billion Relief
and Recovery fund, to provide immediate relief to tourism businesses
operating in Commonwealth National Parks. National park entry fees were also
waived until 31 December 2020.
|
M McCormack (Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development), S Ley (Minister for the
Environment) and S McMahon (Senator for the Northern Territory (NT)), Supporting
tourism businesses in Commonwealth National Parks, media release, 6 May 2020.
|
7 May
|
The Minister for
Families and Social Services announced that the Australian Government would
increase funding to the Men’s Referral Service and the Salvation Army to help
people access support for domestic and family violence during the coronavirus
pandemic.
No to Violence would
receive $2.4 million to expand the Men’s Referral Service to provide
telephone and online support services. The Salvation Army would receive
$320,000 in additional funding towards its Safer in the Home program due to
increased demand for the service.
|
A Ruston (Minister for
Families and Social Services), Boost
to domestic and family violence services, media release, 7 May 2020.
|
|
After concerns over
an outbreak of COVID-19 in a Victorian abattoir, the Australian Government
issued a statement to reassure Australians that there was no evidence that
COVID-19 is transmitted by food.
|
D Littleproud (Minister for
Agriculture, Drought and Emergency Management), Ministers
reassure that food is COVID safe,
media release, 7 May 2020.
|
|
The Attorney-General
announced that the Australian Government would provide an additional $63.3
million to frontline legal services to meet increased demand during the
pandemic:
Of the $63.3 million in
extra funding, $20 million will be used to assist those dealing with domestic
violence matters. Another $29.8 million will help fund other COVID-19 issues,
such as tenancy disputes, insurance, credit and debt related program, and
work related claims.
The remaining $13.5
million would allow service providers to shift to virtual service delivery,
through improvement of IT capabilities.
|
C Porter (Attorney-General),
Funding
boost to ensure struggling Australians can get legal assistance, media release, 7 May 2020.
|
|
The Minister for
Health announced an additional 40 million new masks from the National Medical
Stockpile would be made available for hospitals, aged care workers, GPs and
nurses, Indigenous health workers, respiratory clinics, pharmacists, and
allied health workers, along with a $3 million mental health support program
through the Black Dog Institute for frontline health workers.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), Doorstop,
Melbourne, transcript, 7 May
2020.
|
|
The Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts announced that the Australian
Government opened applications for the ‘$50 million Public Interest News
Gathering (PING) program to support commercial television, radio and
newspaper businesses in regional Australia during COVID-19’.
|
P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), Public
Interest News Gathering Program opens for business, media release, 7 May 2020.
|
8 May
|
The Australian
Government announced that Pacific Island countries would be equipped with
rapid diagnostic tests for COVID-19 through a collaborative effort between Australia, New Zealand, the
United States, the Pacific Community and the WHO.
|
M Payne (Minister for
Foreign Affairs) and A Hawke (Assistant Defence Minister), Increasing
COVID-19 testing capacity in the Pacific, media release, 8 May 2020.
|
|
National Cabinet
finalised the three-step plan to gradually remove baseline restrictions and
‘make Australia COVID-safe’:
-
Step 1 will focus on carefully
reopening the economy, and giving Australians opportunities to return to work
and social activities, including gatherings of up to 10 people, up to 5
visitors in the family home and some local and regional travel
- Step 2 builds on this with gatherings
of up to 20, and more businesses reopening, including gyms, beauty services
and entertainment venues like galleries and cinemas
-
Step 3 will see a transition to COVID
safe ways of living and working, with gatherings of up to 100 people
permitted. Arrangements under step 3 will be the ‘new normal’ while the virus
remains a threat. International travel and mass gatherings over 100 people
will remain restricted.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on Coronavirus measures, media
release, 8 May 2020.
|
11 May
|
The Australian
Government announced $4.9 million in funding under the SME Export Hubs
Initiative to support ten export hubs from five states to help small and
medium enterprises through the coronavirus pandemic.
|
K Andrews (Minister for
Industry, Science and Technology) and S Birmingham (Minister for Trade,
Tourism and Investment), Export
hub grants help businesses through crisis, media release, 11 May 2020.
|
12 May
|
The Australian
Government announced an estimated $3 million in further fee relief from the
Minister for Environment’s portfolio and $2.6 million from the $1 billion
Relief and Recovery Fund for tourism businesses on the Great Barrier Reef,
helping a regional economy hardest hit during the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
M McCormack (Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development), S Birmingham
(Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment), S Ley (Minister for the
Environment) and W Entsch (Special Envoy for the Great Barrier Reef),
Great
Barrier Reef tourism and regional economic boost, media release, 12 May 2020.
|
13 May
|
The Australian
Government’s Taskforce Iris made its first arrest over alleged fraudulent
welfare claims for individuals affected by the coronavirus pandemic and the
bushfires.
|
P Dutton (Minister for Home
Affairs) and S Robert (Minister for Government Services), First
arrest on coronavirus welfare fraud,
media release, 13 May 2020.
|
14 May
|
The Minister for
Aged Care and Senior Australians announced that the Australian Government
amended the Aged Care Act to give aged care residents the option of
taking additional leave during an emergency, such as temporarily relocating
to live with family to decrease risk of exposure to COVID-19.
|
R Colbeck (Minister for Aged
Care and Senior Australians), New
emergency leave provision for aged care residents, media release, 14 May
2020.
|
|
The Australian
Government announced that almost $870 million of defence estate works would
be released to the market to bolster the defence industry as the economy
recovered from COVID-19.
Under the Forward
Release Program, more than 300 work packages were created for the Australian
defence industry.
|
L Reynolds (Minister for
Defence) and M Price (Minister for Defence Industry), Morrison
Government releases Defence estate works in major COVID‑19 support plan, media release, 14 May 2020.
|
|
The Minister for
Education announced that the Australian Government would provide $7 million
to subsidise 1,015 places in courses in ‘teaching, agriculture, health,
science, engineering, clinical psychology, information technology (IT) and
languages’. The short courses were designed for Australians that had lost
their jobs due to the COVID-19 crisis or wanted to ‘retrain in national
priority areas’.
|
D Tehan (Minister for
Education), Short
courses providing new skills to Australians, media release, 14 May 2020.
|
|
The Minister for
Education announced that the Australian Government would provide ‘an
additional $10 million to improve COVID-19 hygiene measures in non-government
schools that plan to have 50 per cent of their students back in the classroom
by June 1’.
|
D
Tehan, (Minister for Education), Improving
hygiene in schools, media release, 14 May 2020.
|
|
The Australian
Parliament passed legislation to protect the privacy of individuals using the
COVIDSafe app. The measures included up to five years in jail or a fine of
$63,000 per offence and made it a criminal offence to ‘coerce a person to use
the app, to store or transfer COVIDSafe data to a country outside Australia,
and to decrypt app data’.
|
C Porter (Attorney-General and
G Hunt (Minister for Health), Privacy
protections for COVIDSafe App enshrined in law, media release, 14 May 2020.
|
|
The Australian
Government welcomed the Australian Rail Track Corporation’s implementation of
measures which ‘provide immediate financial relief to rail freight operators
maintaining the supply of essential goods through the COVID-19 pandemic’.
|
M McCormack (Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development) and M Cormann
(Minister for Finance), ARTC
rail relief welcomed by Australian Government, media release, 14 May 2020.
|
|
The Assistant Minister for
Customs, Community Safety and Multicultural Affairs announced a temporary
‘free’ rate of customs duty for medical equipment to support increased supply
of these products during the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
J Wood (Assistant Minister
for Customs, Community Safety and Multicultural Affairs), Government
temporarily removes customs duty for essential medical and hygiene goods to
combat COVID-19, media release, 14 May
2020.
|
15 May
|
The Prime Minister
announced that National Cabinet had endorsed the National Mental Health and Wellbeing Pandemic Response Plan. Funding of an additional $48.1 million to
support the plan built on
approximately $500 million the Government had announced since 30 January
2020 for mental health and suicide prevention. The plan’s key objectives were to:
- Meet the mental health and wellbeing needs
of all Australians to reduce the negative impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic in
the short and long term;
-
Outline seven key principles and 10 key
priorities to inform the jurisdictions as they respond to the challenges of
COVID-19 during the response and recovery from the pandemic; and
-
Define governance, coordination and
implementation requirements across jurisdictions to facilitate informed
planning and decision making[.]
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
Update
on coronavirus measures, media release, 15 May 2020.
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), B Murphy (Australian Government CMO) and C Morgan (CEO of the
National Mental Health Commission), COVID‑19:
$48.1 million for National Mental Health Wellbeing Pandemic Response
Plan, media release, 15 May
2020.
|
|
In partnership with
the not-for-profit organisation MTPConnect, the Australian Government
announced the third round of its Biomedical Translation Bridge Program. The
$22.3 million program was to support COVID-19 related research projects.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), Government
backs innovative COVID-19 research,
media release, 15 May 2020.
|
|
The Attorney-General announced
that to ease the burden of COVID-19 on civil marriage celebrants, the
Australian Government would waive the annual registration fee of $240 for the
2020–21 financial year.
|
C Porter (Attorney-General),
Fee
relief for struggling marriage celebrants, media release, 15 May 2020.
|
16 May
|
The Minister for Employment,
Skills, Small and Family Business announced that the Australian Government
and state and territory governments agreed to jointly invest $80 million
in the infection control training fund. The fund supported customer-facing
businesses to engage in short courses to train workers in how to minimise the
spread of COVID-19.
|
M Cash (Minister for
Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business), Infection
control training fast-tracked for reopening businesses, media release, 16 May 2020.
|
19 May
|
The Minister for Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts urged Australians to have confidence in
Australia’s safety standards in relation to 5G mobile technology and warned Australians
about misinformation linking the coronavirus and 5G technology.
|
P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), Misinformation
linking 5G and the coronavirus,
media release, 19 May 2020.
|
20 May
|
The Australian
Government announced $1.76 million to support a program of cultural and creative
tours through the Playing Australia initiative ($1,167,654), the Contemporary
Music Touring Program ($335,389) and the Contemporary Touring Initiative
($257,861).
|
P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), Funding
boost for regional touring to assist hard hit communities, media release, 20 May 2020.
|
|
The Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts announced that the Australian
Government would provide $1.1 million from the Visions of Australia
Program to support cultural exhibitions to tour across regional Australia
when restrictions were eased. The projects were to help support jobs, tourism
and a sense of community during the recovery from COVID-19.
|
P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), Support
for cultural exhibition tours across regional Australia, media release, 20 May 2020.
|
21 May
|
The Australian Government
announced that Australia’s aged care and disability support workforce would
be reinforced with new training qualifications to help the sector meet the
demand for skilled workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
M Cash (Minister for
Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business) and S Irons (Assistant
Minister for Vocational Education, Training and Apprenticeships), New
skill set to support aged and disability sectors, media release, 21 May 2020.
|
22 May
|
The Australian
Government announced a new $500 million Local Road and Community
Infrastructure Program and the bringing forward of $1.3 billion of the 2020–21
Financial Assistance Grant payment, which, among other things, was intended
to ‘help communities battling the effects of COVID-19’.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M McCormack (Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional
Development) and M Coulton (Minister for Regional Health, Regional
Communications and Local Government), $1.8
billion boost for local government,
media release, 22 May 2020.
|
|
The Australian
Government announced support to ‘multicultural business owners’ to safely
re-open after coronavirus lockdowns by issuing fact sheets on running
COVID-safe workplaces in 63 languages.
|
A Tudge (Acting Minister for
Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs) and M
Cash (Minister for Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business), Helping
small businesses create COVID-safe workplaces, media release, 22 May 2020.
|
25 May
|
The Minister for
Health announced more than $20 million for ‘research to improve mental health
care and reduce suicide rates in Australia’. This included a new $3 million
grant round for rapid research to improve the national mental health system
response to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, provided under the Medical
Research Future Fund’s $125 Million Minds Mission.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), Additional
$20 million for mental health and suicide prevention research, media release, 25 May 2020.
|
26 May
|
The Australian
Government announced additional funding of $720,000 to Wanslea Family
Services to ensure the Towards Independent Adulthood trial in WA could
continue until March 2021 through the COVID‑19 pandemic.
|
A Ruston (Minister for
Families and Social Services) and M Landry (Assistant Minister for Children
and Families), Continued
support for young people leaving out-of-home care, media release, 26 May 2020.
|
27 May
|
The Minster for
Health announced the Australian Government would provide ‘$690,000 to the
Medical Deans Australia and New Zealand to support mental health first aid
training for all medical students’ so they could recognise and respond to
extra stresses associated with the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), Mental
health first aid training for medical students, media release, 27 May 2020.
|
|
The Minister for
Health announced an additional two million flu vaccines would be available
throughout Australia in 2020 to protect the general health of Australians
from influenza, ‘particularly important this year due to COVID-19’.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), Record
flu vaccines in 2020 to protect Australians, media release, 27 May 2020.
|
|
The Australian
Government announced ‘$5 million in funding for a national campaign to
encourage Australians to support local small businesses’. The national
campaign was to run with the assistance of the Council of Small Business
Organisations Australia.
|
M Cash (Minister for
Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business), Supporting
local campaign to get small business back on track, media release, 27 May 2020.
|
28 May
|
The Australian
Government announced a $6 million communications package to support
senior Australians experiencing loneliness and social isolation due to the
coronavirus pandemic. Almost $5 million was to be used to expand Friend Line,
a national telephone support network for senior Australians. To provide
at-risk seniors with digital devices, $1 million in grants was awarded to 215
local community organisations.
|
A Ruston (Minister for
Families and Social Services), P Fletcher (Minister for Communications, Cyber
Safety and the Arts) and R Colbeck (Minister for Aged Care and Senior
Australians), Supporting
isolated senior Australians to stay connected, media release, 28 May 2020.
|
29 May
|
The Australian
Government announced the redirection of over $280 million from the
Partnerships for Recovery program to support the medical and humanitarian
needs of the Pacific, Timor-Leste and other partner countries in Southeast
Asia during the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
M Payne (Minister for
Foreign Affairs) and A Hawke (Minister for International Development and
the Pacific), Partnering
with our neighbours to respond to COVID-19, media release, 29 May 2020.
|
31 May
|
The Australian
Government announced that mutual obligation requirements for job seekers
would re-recommence from 9 June 2020, requiring job seekers to undertake
at least one appointment with their employment services provider either
online or over the phone.
|
A Ruston (Minister for
Families and Social Services) and M Cash (Minister for Employment, Skills,
Small and Family Business), Gradual
return of mutual obligation requirements, media release, 31 May
2020.
|
June 2020
|
|
|
1 June
|
The Australian Government
announced that in partnership with the Pacific Island Forum, Australia would provide
$5.5 million to the World Food Programme to support efforts to manage
COVID-19 in the Pacific. The support includes:
… $4 million for air transport
and logistics services for the Pacific Humanitarian Pathway, the delivery of
humanitarian and critical medical supplies, including Personal Protective
Equipment, and assessments of the impact of COVID-19 on food security in the
Pacific.
|
M Payne (Minister for
Foreign Affairs), A Hawke (Minister for International Development and
the Pacific) and S Kofe (Chair of the Pacific Islands Forum Foreign
Ministers), Working
together to combat COVID-19 in the Pacific, media release, 1 June 2020.
|
2 June
|
The Minister for Health
announced that the Australian Government would provide ‘$66 million into
finding a vaccine and treatments for COVID-19, as well as better preparing
for future pandemics’.
The funding included and
built on the $30 million announced on 11 March for the Coronavirus Research
Response and was provided under the Medical Research Future Fund.
The announcement included:
-
a further $2 million for the
University of Queensland’s ‘molecular clamp’
vaccine technology (bringing total funding to $5 million)
-
a further $13.6 million in grant
opportunities to support promising COVID-19 vaccine development projects in
2020–21
- nine research teams receiving
$7.3 million to support the development of promising antiviral therapies
-
seven clinical trials receiving $6.8
million to investigate treatments for the severe respiratory symptoms of
COVID-19
- $3.3 million to the University of NSW
for genomics research
-
$4 million for digital health
research infrastructure
-
$2 million for research into the
human immune response to COVID-19 infection and
-
$600,000 for research to understand
the community’s information needs
and behavioural drivers during outbreaks, and strategies to address these.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), $66
million for coronavirus-related research, media release, 2 June
2020.
|
4 June
|
The Australian
Government announced the HomeBuilder program, to ‘fill the gap in construction activity expected in the
second half of 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic’. From 4 June 2020 until 31 December 2020, ‘HomeBuilder
will provide all eligible owner-occupiers (not just first home buyers) with a
grant of $25,000 to build a new home or substantially renovate an existing
home’.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
J Frydenberg (Treasurer) and M Sukkar (Assistant Treasurer and Minister
for Housing), 'Homebuilder’
program to drive economic activity across the residential construction sector, media release, 4 June 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government pledged $300 million from the existing development
budget to Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, an international public-private
partnership that provides access to vaccines for low-income countries.
|
M Payne (Minister for
Foreign Affairs) and A Hawke (Minister for International Development and
the Pacific), Improving
access to vaccines for the Indo-Pacific, media release, 4 June 2020.
|
|
The
Minister for Women announced that the Pacific Women Leaders met virtually to
‘discuss the impact of COVID-19 on women’s health, economic security and
personal safety’.
Building on
existing programs to support gender equality and empower women and girls in
the Indo-Pacific region, the Australian Government announced ‘an additional
$16 million to address the differential impact of COVID-19 in the community.’
|
M Payne (Minister for
Foreign Affairs and Minister for Women), Standing
with Pacific women during COVID‑19, media release, 4 June 2020.
|
5 June
|
The Australian
Government welcomed the announcement that a COVID-19 vaccine candidate, led
by the University of Queensland, would be developed in Australia.
|
D Tehan (Minister for
Education), Government
welcomes UQ’s COVID-19 vaccine candidate, media release, 5 June 2020.
|
8 June
|
The Acting Minister
for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs
announced that the Australian Government had resumed in-person citizenship
ceremonies for councils that were able to host physical events safely. For
councils unable to host physical events safely, online ceremonies would
continue.
|
A Tudge (Acting Minister for
Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs), In-person
citizenship ceremonies to resume,
media release, 8 June 2020.
|
|
The Minister for Education
announced that the Early Childhood Education and Care Relief Package (which
included the fee-free child care arrangements) would end on 12 July 2020. The
Child Care Subsidy system would resume as of 13 July. The Minister also announced
that JobKeeper Payment would cease from 20 July 2020 for employees of Child
Care Subsidy approved services. A Transition Payment would be introduced to
assist services and child care employees made ineligible for JobKeeper
Payment.
|
D Tehan (Minister for
Education), A
return to the Child Care Subsidy,
media release, 8 June 2020.
|
9 June
|
The Australian
Government announced funding of $24.2 million for additional mental health care at headspace, noting
‘disruption to normal life caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and the required
restrictions has had profound impacts on young Australians’.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and R Colbeck (Minister for Youth and Sport), $24
million funding boost for additional mental health care at headspace, media release, 9 June 2020.
|
10 June
|
The Australian
Government committed more than $4.7 million to provide access to free and
confidential financial counselling to small regional business affected by
COVID-19.
|
M McCormack (Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development), D Littleproud
(Minister for Agriculture, Drought and Emergency Management), and M Cash
(Minister for Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business), Backing
small regional businesses affected by COVID-19, media release, 10 June 2020.
|
12 June
|
Due to the easing of
coronavirus restrictions, the Minister for the NDIS announced that the NDIS
would move to a post-pandemic phase from 1 July 2020. This included:
-
removal of temporary 10 per cent
price loading on certain core and capacity building supports;
-
definition of cancellation period is
reduced from 10 days to levels under the previous policy; and
- Medium Term Accommodation (MTA)
period will be returned to the original policy of 90 days (rolled back from
180 days).
|
S Robert (Minister for the
National Disability Insurance Scheme), Update
on NDIS coronavirus response, media release, 12 June 2020.
|
13 June
|
The Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development announced the Australian
Government’s Regional Airports Program, which provided 60 regional airports
with $41.2 million in funding in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
M McCormack (Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development), Vital
funding for regional airports, media
release, 13 June 2020.
|
15 June
|
The Minister for
Industry, Science and Technology announced that the Australian Government was
strengthening Australia’s capability to produce essential medical supplies
during the COVID-19 pandemic by funding local companies to make PPE.
|
K Andrews (Minister for
Industry, Science and Technology), Growing
Australia’s PPE capacity, media
release, 15 June 2020.
|
17 June
|
The Australian
Government announced $550,000 in funding over two years to support children
and young people who have a parent or guardian with a mental illness. This
was in response to the increased caring responsibilities and challenges these
children and young people faced because of the necessary restrictions to
contain the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
G Hunt (Minister for Health)
and R Colbeck (Minister for Youth and Sport), COVID-19:
support for children and young people,
media release, 17 June 2020.
|
|
The Minister for
Women announced that the Australian Government would provide over $1.8 million
in grants under the Women’s Leadership and Development Program to assist
Australia’s economic recovery from COVID-19.
|
M Payne (Minister for
Women), Support
for Australian women during and beyond COVID-19, media release, 17 June 2020.
|
19 June
|
The Australian
Government endorsed health advice from the AHPPC and the International Air
Transport Association to develop the Domestic Passenger Journey Protocol, which
would provide ‘clear and consistent advice to Australians travelling
domestically’ and ‘give
confidence to passengers flying in the post-pandemic era’.
|
M McCormack (Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development) and G Hunt (Minister
for Health), Keeping
travellers safe as COVID-19 restrictions ease, media release, 19 June 2020.
|
20 June
|
The Minister for Agriculture, Drought and Emergency Management announced $4 million in funding for a national marketing
campaign to promote Australian seafood. According to the Minister, ‘The
Australian seafood sector has been severely impacted by the COVID-19
outbreak, as more than half its total value traditionally flows from
exports’.
|
D Littleproud (Minister for
Agriculture, Drought and Emergency Management), $4 million
helping hand as fishers reel from COVID impact, media release, 20 June 2020.
|
21 June
|
The Australian Government
announced $223 million, jointly funded with the WA Government, ‘to
deliver shovel-ready infrastructure projects and urgent road safety upgrades’
to help with economic recovery following the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M McCormack (Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional
Development), M Cormann (Minister for Finance), A Tudge (Minister for
Population, Cities and Urban Infrastructure), M McGowan (WA Premier) and R
Saffioti (WA Minister for Transport and Planning), $233
million to unlock hundreds of local infrastructure jobs, media release, 21 June
2020.
|
22 June
|
The Australian Government
announced $53 million, jointly funded with the NT Government, ‘to
deliver shovel-ready infrastructure projects and urgent road safety upgrades’
to help with economic recovery following the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M McCormack (Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional
Development), A Tudge (Minister for Infrastructure, Planning and Logistics),
M Gunner (NT Chief Minister) and E Lawler (NT Minister for
Infrastructure, Planning and Logistics), $53 million
to unlock infrastructure jobs in the NT, media release, 22 June 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government
announced $415 million, jointly funded with the Queensland Government,
‘to deliver shovel-ready infrastructure projects and urgent road safety
upgrades’ to help with economic recovery following the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M McCormack (Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development),
A Tudge (Minister for Infrastructure, Planning and Logistics), A Palaszczuk
(Premier of Queensland) and M Bailey (Queensland Minister for Transport
and Main Roads), $415 million
to unlock hundreds of infrastructure jobs in Queensland, media release, 22 June 2020.
|
|
The Australian Government
announced $35 million, jointly funded with the Australian Capital
Territory (ACT) Government, ‘to deliver shovel-ready infrastructure projects
and urgent road safety upgrades’ to help with economic recovery following the
COVID-19 pandemic.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M McCormack (Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development),
A Tudge (Minister for Infrastructure, Planning and Logistics), Z Seselja
(Senator for the ACT), A Barr (Chief Minister) and C Steel (ACT Minister for
Roads and Active Travel), $35 million
to unlock infrastructure jobs in the ACT, media release, 22 June 2020.
|
24 June
|
The Australian Government
announced $145 million, jointly funded with the SA Government, ‘to
deliver shovel-ready infrastructure projects and urgent road safety upgrades’
to help with economic recovery following the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M McCormack (Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional
Development), S Marshall (SA Premier), A Tudge (Minister for Population,
Cities and Urban Infrastructure) and S Knoll (SA Minister for Transport,
Infrastructure and Local Government), $145
million to unlock infrastructure jobs in SA, media release, 24 June 2020.
|
25 June
|
The Minister for
Health announced that the Australian Government was providing PPE including
gowns, masks, gloves and goggles, to general practices in the ski fields in
NSW and Victoria to help protect frontline medical workers during the ski
season.
|
G Hunt (Minister for
Health), PPE
for GPs near the ski fields, media
release, 25 June 2020.
|
|
The
Australian Government announced $46 million, jointly funded with the
Tasmanian Government, ‘to deliver shovel-ready infrastructure projects and
urgent road safety upgrades’ to help with economic recovery following the
COVID-19 pandemic.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
M McCormack (Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional
Development), P Gutwein (Premier of Tasmania), A Tudge (Minister for
Population, Cities and Urban Infrastructure) and M Ferguson (Tasmanian Minister
for Infrastructure and Transport), $46
million to unlock infrastructure jobs in Tasmania, media release, 25 June 2020.
|
|
The Australian
Government announced $36 million in funding for the Supporting
Agricultural Shows program, providing ‘a one-off reimbursement to
agricultural show societies to deal with cash flow pressures caused by
COVID-19 related cancellation of agricultural shows’.
|
M McCormack (Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development) and D Littleproud
(Minister for Agriculture, Drought and Emergency Management), $36 million
for our agricultural communities—the shows will go on, media release, 25 June 2020.
|
26 June
|
The Minister for
Industry, Science and Technology announced $1.9 million in funding for
Digital Coaching International to establish ‘The Enterprising Community’, to
support small businesses to digitise their operations and processes in a
post-COVID economy.
|
K Andrews (Minister for
Industry, Science and Technology), Empowering
businesses to go digital in COVID recovery, media release, 26 June 2020.
|
28 June
|
Due
to an increasing amount of negative online experiences during the COVID-19
pandemic, the Minister for Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts
announced an additional $10 million in funding for the eSafety
Commissioner. This funding was to assist in education and equipping people
with the practical skills to stay safe online.
|
P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), $10
million boost to vital eSafety support, media release, 28 June
2020.
|
29 June
|
The Australian Government
announced $1 billion, jointly funded with the NSW Government, ‘in
shovel-ready infrastructure projects and urgent road safety upgrades’ to help with economic recovery following the COVID-19
pandemic.
|
S Morrison (Prime Minister),
G Berejiklian (NSW Premier), M McCormack (Minister for Infrastructure,
Transport and Regional Development), A Tudge (Minister for Population, Cities
and Urban Infrastructure), A Constance (NSW Minister for Transport) and
P Toole (NSW Minister for Regional Transport and Roads), $1
billion to unlock thousands of infrastructure jobs in NSW, media release, 29 June 2020.
|
|
To support regional news
services in 2020–21, the 107 regional publishers and broadcasters who applied
for PING would receive a share of the $50 million (announced by the Minister
for Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts on 7 May 2021).
|
P Fletcher (Minister for
Communications, Cyber Safety and the Arts), $50
million to flow to support regional news, media release,
29 June 2020.
|
30 June
|
The Australian Government
announced $7.8 million in funding to support Australia’s oil recycling
facilities affected by COVID-19.
|
M McCormack (Minister for
Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development), S Ley (Minister for the
Environment), T Evans (Assistant Minister for Waste Reduction and
Environmental Management), K O’Dowd (Federal Member for Flynn), More
funding to support Australia’s oil recycling industry, media release, 30 June 2020.
|
|
The Assistant Treasurer
announced that the Australian Government had ‘revised start dates for a
number of technical superannuation and taxation measures’, resulting from
‘the reprioritisation of Government resources and the shortened parliamentary
sitting period in 2020 due to the COVID-19 crisis’.
|
M Sukkar (Assistant Treasurer),
Revised
start dates for technical superannuation and taxation measurers, media release, 30 June 2020.
|