Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcement?
#16
Forum Regular
Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 58
Re: Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcemen
Good article here. I dare say the typical SMH reader won't be happy with it, but there you go.
https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/...16-p590hy.html
https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/...16-p590hy.html
"The treatment some Australians have dished out to each other - and particularly to those overseas - has been shameful. We will not look back at this element of our pandemic management with any pride. No other country sought to treat its own in the way that every Australian political leader chose to. Sadly, their approach was by and large supported by the public. The bulk of society appeared unmoved by the trauma imposed by the border closures on ordinary Australians (...)."
It is obvious that the hotel quarantine system and the related flight caps resulted in great despair amongst those who tried to come back, often multiple times without luck.
I found it strange that a lot of people back in Australia seemed to believe that there were only 2 options: Let Australians come back (in a safe way) OR accept many deaths. There was nothing in between which completely ignored that fact that some other countries have also managed the pandemic relatively well without locking out their citizens. The failure was within inadequate infection control protocols - not returning Australians.
I once talked to an ex-ADF guy who had also been trying to return to Australia without success for many months - and he was appalled to be essentially being locked out of the country for which he once fought, saying that this is not what the Anzac spirit is about. You never leave a man behind.
I believe that there could have been a much more humanitarian approach.
If the government doesn't trust its people to home quarantine - then why was this app (for home quarantine) only developed so late in the pandemic? I am not an IT expert but I don't think it's that hard and could have been done a lot earlier. This would have allowed Australians to come back home in a safe way. Or why are many Queenslanders still stranded in NSW? Because the Qld government doesn't trust them to drive back to their homes and quarantine there - instead they need to catch a plane and burden the already overstretched hotel quarantine system.
Stranded Aussies (interstate and overseas) have been the casualties of the zero Covid pursuit.
Anyway, not going to dwell over spilt milk and I am glad that this dark chapter is hopefully over and NSW leading the way - again, excellent news. Thousands of available tickets have been made available and I will soon be able to come back home.
Last edited by physiogirl76; Oct 16th 2021 at 4:52 pm.
#17
Forum Regular
Thread Starter
Joined: Aug 2021
Posts: 247
Re: Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcemen
Very good article which touches a sore point.
"The treatment some Australians have dished out to each other - and particularly to those overseas - has been shameful. We will not look back at this element of our pandemic management with any pride. No other country sought to treat its own in the way that every Australian political leader chose to. Sadly, their approach was by and large supported by the public. The bulk of society appeared unmoved by the trauma imposed by the border closures on ordinary Australians (...)."
It is obvious that the hotel quarantine system and the related flight caps resulted in great despair amongst those who tried to come back, often multiple times without luck.
I found it strange that a lot of people back in Australia seemed to believe that there were only 2 options: Let Australians come back (in a safe way) OR accept many deaths. There was nothing in between which completely ignored that fact that some other countries have also managed the pandemic relatively well without locking out their citizens. The failure was within inadequate infection control protocols - not returning Australians.
I once talked to an ex-ADF guy who had also been trying to return to Australia without success for many months - and he was appalled to be essentially being locked out of the country for which he once fought, saying that this is not what the Anzac spirit is about. You never leave a man behind.
I believe that there could have been a much more humanitarian approach.
If the government doesn't trust its people to home quarantine - then why was this app (for home quarantine) only developed so late in the pandemic? I am not an IT expert but I don't think it's that hard and could have been done a lot earlier. This would have allowed Australians to come back home in a safe way. Or why are many Queenslanders still stranded in NSW? Because the Qld government doesn't trust them to drive back to their homes and quarantine there - instead they need to catch a plane and burden the already overstretched hotel quarantine system.
Stranded Aussies (interstate and overseas) have been the casualties of the zero Covid pursuit.
Anyway, not going to dwell over spilt milk and I am glad that this dark chapter is hopefully over and NSW leading the way - again, excellent news. Thousands of available tickets have been made available and I will soon be able to come back home.
"The treatment some Australians have dished out to each other - and particularly to those overseas - has been shameful. We will not look back at this element of our pandemic management with any pride. No other country sought to treat its own in the way that every Australian political leader chose to. Sadly, their approach was by and large supported by the public. The bulk of society appeared unmoved by the trauma imposed by the border closures on ordinary Australians (...)."
It is obvious that the hotel quarantine system and the related flight caps resulted in great despair amongst those who tried to come back, often multiple times without luck.
I found it strange that a lot of people back in Australia seemed to believe that there were only 2 options: Let Australians come back (in a safe way) OR accept many deaths. There was nothing in between which completely ignored that fact that some other countries have also managed the pandemic relatively well without locking out their citizens. The failure was within inadequate infection control protocols - not returning Australians.
I once talked to an ex-ADF guy who had also been trying to return to Australia without success for many months - and he was appalled to be essentially being locked out of the country for which he once fought, saying that this is not what the Anzac spirit is about. You never leave a man behind.
I believe that there could have been a much more humanitarian approach.
If the government doesn't trust its people to home quarantine - then why was this app (for home quarantine) only developed so late in the pandemic? I am not an IT expert but I don't think it's that hard and could have been done a lot earlier. This would have allowed Australians to come back home in a safe way. Or why are many Queenslanders still stranded in NSW? Because the Qld government doesn't trust them to drive back to their homes and quarantine there - instead they need to catch a plane and burden the already overstretched hotel quarantine system.
Stranded Aussies (interstate and overseas) have been the casualties of the zero Covid pursuit.
Anyway, not going to dwell over spilt milk and I am glad that this dark chapter is hopefully over and NSW leading the way - again, excellent news. Thousands of available tickets have been made available and I will soon be able to come back home.
All of the active outbreaks currently occurring in Australia stem from breaches of quarantine. Despite all of the security, the restrictions on movement and limited number of people entering confinement people have died because one or two people have done the wrong thing.
They're put into hotel quarantine because at least they can be daily monitored there, get fed so there's no need to risk a visit to the supermarket, they can't go to work and infect their co-workers or just pop-out to the chemist for a box of aspirin. There are only a limited number of hotels that are suitable for this use, and when infected people are found there are so few that they are able to be moved out of the hotels into local hospitals that are able to treat them without becoming overwhelmed.
All of the people who choose to travel during a pandemic do so at their own risk, when people choose to leave Australia there are measures in place to ensure that their departure is long term - that they're not going to come back after a few months and put extra pressure on the system at a time when genuine returnees are desperate to get home.
In my opinion people who 'game the system' and boast how they lied in order to leave Australia (i.e. said they were going away long term when they weren't) should get to the back of the queue when trying to get back in. To be honest it offends me when they bitch and moan about 'fortress australia' and a loss of mateship when they can't.
Everyone is doing it hard, some harder than others. There are people on this forum who are on their own and desperate to go back to the UK to be with family - they aren't able to 'game the system' and leave.
There are Queenslanders living in tents with young children just over the border because they left Queensland when the borders were open and got trapped when they slammed shut. They're living on the charity of strangers, having their benefits cut off because they're not in their usual place of habitation. Some are desperately sick with chronic illnesses and aren't able to get the medical attention they need. Some are finding out their homes have been broken into because they've been unoccupied for so long. They aren't able to stay with family and friends or find work in vaccination centres while they while away the time and travel around Europe
So don't you dare come here telling us how hard done by you are and how the Australian sense of mateship no longer exists because you can't get back in when you want to and have been forced to wait like you should. Believe me the mateship definitely exists in Australia and it has been strengthened during the pandemic, but some people's sense of entitlement prevents them from realising it.
No doubt in a few weeks you'll be back complaining how unfair it is that tickets to Australia are soooo expensive because of the demand and supply. How the airlines are making a killing at the expense of good honest hardworking Australians. I don't think you'll appreciate the irony of that.
Last edited by Brisbannite; Oct 16th 2021 at 8:56 pm.
#18
Lost in BE Cyberspace
Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 14,040
Re: Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcemen
#19
Home and Happy
Joined: Dec 2002
Location: Keep true friends and puppets close, trust no-one else...
Posts: 93,786
Re: Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcemen
They have eaten humble pie over the "no food deliveries" and in "extenuating circumstances" you can now do contactless supermarket deliveries. But you must fly in to Brisbane before driving to your home to quarantine. All those families stuck at the border have their vehicles with them, So they have to abandon their own vehicles, fly to Brisbane, Somehow arrange for a car to get to their quarantine premises and keep that car for two weeks so they can use it to get to the testing stations on 4 occasions. People are not being trusted to drive 50km across the border to their own homes.
The system is crackers, and it almost seems like they are putting as many obstacles in the way as possible.
#20
Lost in BE Cyberspace
Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 14,040
Re: Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcemen
Qld is now trialling home Q for those stranded interstate. But with some strange conditions which are making it nearly impossible for many families.
They have eaten humble pie over the "no food deliveries" and in "extenuating circumstances" you can now do contactless supermarket deliveries. But you must fly in to Brisbane before driving to your home to quarantine. All those families stuck at the border have their vehicles with them, So they have to abandon their own vehicles, fly to Brisbane, Somehow arrange for a car to get to their quarantine premises and keep that car for two weeks so they can use it to get to the testing stations on 4 occasions. People are not being trusted to drive 50km across the border to their own homes.
The system is crackers, and it almost seems like they are putting as many obstacles in the way as possible.
They have eaten humble pie over the "no food deliveries" and in "extenuating circumstances" you can now do contactless supermarket deliveries. But you must fly in to Brisbane before driving to your home to quarantine. All those families stuck at the border have their vehicles with them, So they have to abandon their own vehicles, fly to Brisbane, Somehow arrange for a car to get to their quarantine premises and keep that car for two weeks so they can use it to get to the testing stations on 4 occasions. People are not being trusted to drive 50km across the border to their own homes.
The system is crackers, and it almost seems like they are putting as many obstacles in the way as possible.
Current projections for 80% in QLD is 38 days away. No doubt Brisbane will get there well before that but the rest of the state might be a struggle. Interesting times.
#21
Forum Regular
Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 58
Re: Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcemen
All of the active outbreaks currently occurring in Australia stem from breaches of quarantine. Despite all of the security, the restrictions on movement and limited number of people entering confinement people have died because one or two people have done the wrong thing.
They're put into hotel quarantine because at least they can be daily monitored there, get fed so there's no need to risk a visit to the supermarket, they can't go to work and infect their co-workers or just pop-out to the chemist for a box of aspirin. There are only a limited number of hotels that are suitable for this use, and when infected people are found there are so few that they are able to be moved out of the hotels into local hospitals that are able to treat them without becoming overwhelmed.
All of the people who chose to travel during a pandemic do so at their own risk, when people choose to leave Australia there are measures in place to ensure that their departure is long term - that they're not going to come back after a few months and put extra pressure on the system at a time when genuine returnees are desperate to get home.
In my opinion people who 'game the system' and boast how they lied in order to leave Australia (i.e. said they were going away long term when they weren't) should get to the back of the queue when trying to get back in. To be honest it offends me when they bitch and moan about 'fortress australia' and a loss of mateship when they can't.
Everyone is doing it hard, some harder than others. There are people on this forum who are on their own and desperate to go back to the UK to be with family - they aren't able to 'game the system' and leave.
In my opinion people who 'game the system' and boast how they lied in order to leave Australia (i.e. said they were going away long term when they weren't) should get to the back of the queue when trying to get back in. To be honest it offends me when they bitch and moan about 'fortress australia' and a loss of mateship when they can't.
Everyone is doing it hard, some harder than others. There are people on this forum who are on their own and desperate to go back to the UK to be with family - they aren't able to 'game the system' and leave.
Nobody has an issue to line up to get back in - but the system was never based on a fair first come first serve basis. There was no queue. People who had flights booked back months in advance were suddenly bumped off their flights while celebrities or people who could afford expensive tickets were able to jump the queue. I much prefer the NZ approach were you had to book your quarantine spot on a first come first serve basis in order to be eligible to book a flight back - rather than the "Hunger Games" which happened within the Australian system where airlines were essentially the ones running the system.
There are Queenslanders living in tents with young children just over the border because they left Queensland when the borders were open and got trapped when they slammed shut. They're living on the charity of strangers, having their benefits cut off because they're not in their usual place of habitation. Some are desperately sick with chronic illnesses and aren't able to get the medical attention they need. Some are finding out their homes have been broken into because they've been unoccupied for so long. They aren't able to stay with family and friends or find work in vaccination centres while they while away the time and travel around Europe
And isn't it sad that Queensland locks out their own citizens like that? As Pollyanna has mentioned, the home quarantine criteria by the Qld goverment are ridiculously high so only a fraction of those people are eligible. I really feel sorry for them.
I prefer discussing ideas and topics - not taking shots at individuals.
Last edited by physiogirl76; Oct 17th 2021 at 9:38 am.
#22
Lost in BE Cyberspace
Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 14,040
Re: Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcemen
Don't feel you need to justify your life to those not looking to move forward. We are only in a position where we can't live our lives with freedom because of narrow minds. For me, stopping citizens from entering their own country or state is one of the most disgraceful acts of this pandemic. Find me another country in the world where their own citizens have been rendered stateless.
For us in Sydney and potentially Melbourne (however Dan said this morning he may open up and persist with hotel quarantine) hotel quarantine and flight caps should very soon be a thing of the past and with that brings the airlines back, giving everyone a choice of outward and inward travel freedom of movement and airline choice.
Thinking positive has got to be a far happier place than going backward.
Last edited by Beoz; Oct 17th 2021 at 10:07 pm.
#23
Forum Regular
Thread Starter
Joined: Aug 2021
Posts: 247
Re: Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcemen
Good to see Jeanette Young at the Premier's side at the presser this afternoon answering questions from the floor during a key public health announcement. Both are remarkable women and a credit to the state.
#24
Lost in BE Cyberspace
Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 14,040
Re: Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcemen
#25
Forum Regular
Thread Starter
Joined: Aug 2021
Posts: 247
Re: Why on earth would a Premier leave out the CHO from a key health announcemen