Brits may be able to take self-catered staycations by Easter if R rate stays low enough to reduce Covid measures
BRITS could be allowed to take self-catered breaks by Easter if the reproductive rate of the virus stays low, reports claim.
Under Boris Johnson's road map for lifting Covid restrictions, the hospitality industry could open its doors again from the Easter weekend.
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According to government ministers are considering allowing families from the same household to go on holidays from the Easter break.
But the plans would only happen if the crucial R-rate remains low up to April 2.
The PM is set to announce how he will ease the nation out of lockdown on February 22.
He is expected to axe the hated tier system and has vowed to prioritise the reopening of schools no sooner than March 8.
Speaking last week during a visit today to the Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies plant in Billingham, Teesside, where the new Novavax vaccine will be manufactured, he said: "I'm optimistic, I won't hide it from you.
"I'm optimistic, but we have to be cautious."
He said his first priority remained opening schools in England on March 8 to be followed by non-essential retail and then hospitality venues.
He added: "Our children's education is our number one priority, but then working forward, getting non-essential retail open as well and then, in due course, as and when we can prudently, cautiously, of course we want to be opening hospitality as well.
"I will be trying to set out as much as I possibly can in as much detail as I can, always understanding that we have to be wary of the pattern of disease.
"We don't want to be forced into any kind of retreat or reverse ferret."
If the R number, which fell below one on Friday for the first time since July, remains low and Covid infections stay at an “acceptable level”, the PM is expected to green light non-essential shops to reopen towards the end of March.
There will then be "another short wait" until hospitality businesses and pubs open, according to the i newspaper who cited a senior government official.
Here's what could happen in Boris' roadmap:
Staycations
Hospitality businesses could open their doors again in England from the Easter weekend if the R rate remains low up to April 2.
It would mean the return of the staycation - although international travel would still likely be on hold.
Tier system to be axed
Boris Johnson is said to have been persuaded to axe the tier system, which many experts believe did little to prevent the spread of the virus, especially the Kent variant.
“The Government would like to do away with the tier system entirely,” a senior Government official told the i.
“The current plan is very much the three-stage approach, beginning with the reopening of schools, watching the R number, and if that remains low then non-essential shops will open.
“Then another short wait until hospitality businesses open.”
Schools
Boris has insisted schools will be the first to reopen as measures start to ease and has promised to give the sector two weeks’ notice for kids to get back to class.
It was previously assumed age groups would be staggered for their return, but the PM is now said to be considering a “big bang” approach where all pupils go back at the same time.
It is feared, however, the March 8 start date could be pushed back until infection rates are low enough across the board.
Pubs
Pubs and restaurants may be able to serve outdoors in April if Covid cases continue to fall, The Sun revealed on Friday.
A government source said: “We will hopefully be sipping pints in the spring sunshine sooner rather than later.”
It comes after Boris Johnson told reporters at the start of the month that "going down the tiers in a national way, might be better this time round, given that the disease is behaving much more nationally".
He added: "If you look at the way the new variant has taken off across the country, it's a pretty national phenomenon."
Professor Neil Ferguson, whose warnings about the potential Covid death toll led to the first lockdown in March, agrees that brighter days are coming as the UK's daily infection and death toll continues to drop.
He said on Friday that Brits could be allowed to meet friends and loved ones indoors from May and lockdown measures could be eased every three weeks from March 8.
The expert, who is nicknamed Professor Lockdown and is on the Government advisory body Nervtag, said areas with the lowest rates of Covid could go into Tier 1-style restrictions by May.
And at the very least, he thinks the whole of England could be under Tier 2-like restrictions.
Under the lowest tier rules last year, a maximum of six people could meet indoors and outdoors, while pubs were open without punters needing to buy meals and non-essential shops could keep doors open.
In Tier 2, household mixing indoors was banned, but groups of six could meet outside. Pubs and bars were ordered to close unless they could serve food.
In an interview on a Politico podcast, Prof Ferguson said: "By May time, it's realistic to be in something akin to Tier 2.
"Maybe with areas of very low incidence by that time, we could move to Tier 1 type measures, completely relaxing and having something akin to where we were in August."
However, he cautioned that the road out of tough measures will be a "bumpy" and slow one - and it could be next year before all restrictions are finally gone.
He said restrictions could gradually be eased every three weeks after schools reopen on March 8 and that the Government unlocked Britain too quickly last year.
He said: "I'm much more comfortable with a strategy that implements one change, then watches what happens for 3 weeks, so we can see the effect of that change.
"Hopefully by May, we'll be in a place much more like October, rather than having ever intensified social distancing."
Up to 90 per cent of over 50s must be vaccinated before society can begin its long return to normality, he said.
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And every adult must have had the jab for life to go on as it was before.