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Victoria allows 75 percent office worker capacity from Monday 8 February 2021

Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews has announced that office-based workplaces in both the public and private sectors can return to 75 percent capacity from Monday 8 February 2021.  

This is the next step in Victoria’s staged return to work and will be accelerated next week with new health advice allowing office-based workers to return to three fourth capacity.

Premier Daniel Andrews said, we are here to help and support businesses to return to full capacity as soon as possible.

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“Victorians have worked so hard to fight this virus. We’ve built something precious, and we need to protect it.”

“From our new permit system to hotel quarantine and workplace COVIDSafe plans – these measures are fundamentally about keeping Victoria safe and open.”

With no evidence of community transmission in Victoria for 27 days now, both public sector and private sector office-based workplaces will be able to return. 

Record-keeping requirements for workplaces will remain unchanged, which means an employer must keep a record of all workers and all visitors who attend the premises for longer than 15 minutes.

Legislation will be introduced into the Victorian Parliament this week to ensure the public health directions protecting Victorians from coronavirus – including requiring workplaces to have a COVIDSafe Plan – can continue to be enforced.

A number of key health protections required to manage this pandemic are only available when a State of Emergency has been declared under the Public Health and Wellbeing Act 2008 – such as hotel quarantine, mandatory face coverings in certain settings, and other restrictions to help slow the spread of the virus.

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A State of Emergency is only ever declared or extended on the advice of the Chief Health Officer and the Emergency Management Commissioner.

It allows the Government to run Victoria’s traffic light permit system, which provides invaluable information about who has entered Victoria and from where and the ability to identify areas of risk in Australia and prevent travel from those areas when they are deemed a risk to public health.

It also ensures public health risk powers can be exercised – for example, by requiring positive cases of coronavirus to isolate.

The current State of Emergency declared in respect of the coronavirus pandemic has a maximum period of 12 months, which will expire at 11:59 pm on 15 March 2021. The new legislation will permit the Government to extend the State of Emergency for an additional nine months in four-week increments – expiring at 11.59pm on 15 December 2021.

Until the vaccine is rolled out, Victorians need to continue in the fight against coronavirus and work to keep the entire community safe – and the State of Emergency allows the government to do exactly that.

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