South Australia to open borders to fully vaccinated travellers next month

Premier Steven Marshall has outlined plans for the state to ease some coronavirus restrictions when 80 per cent of South Australian adults are expected to be fully vaccinated.

South Australia Premier Steven Marshall speaks to the media during a press conference in Adelaide, Tuesday, July 27, 2021. (AAP Image/Pool, Naomi Jellicoe) NO ARCHIVING

South Australia Premier Steven Marshall. Source: NCA Newswire Pool

South Australia will remove all domestic border restrictions from 23 November for travellers who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

Quarantine periods for overseas arrivals will be reduced from 14 days to seven from the same date, while the cap on home gatherings will rise from 20 people to 30.

Other internal restrictions are expected to be eased before Christmas as SA eyes a return to relative normality for the festive season.
"There has to be some reward for the sacrifices that individuals and businesses have made, and today it is with great pride I announce our COVID-ready plan for South Australia," Premier Steven Marshall told reporters on Tuesday.

"I know this will be a huge relief for so many South Australians who are wanting to get back to normality as soon as possible."

Authorities are expecting 80 per cent of South Australian adults to be fully vaccinated by November 23.

Further restrictions will be eased once 90 per cent of the population aged 12 and over has been double-jabbed.

That is expected to be achieved before Christmas, allowing quarantine to be scrapped for fully vaccinated overseas arrivals.
There will be no requirement for all individual local government areas to achieve the 80 per cent rate by 23 November, but Mr Marshall said authorities would redouble their vaccination efforts in areas that were lagging.

"I think there will be a big surge now in the vaccination rate," he said.

"The health experts are now telling us that vaccination is our pathway out."

Anyone who becomes infected between the 80 per cent and 90 per cent thresholds will still need to isolate, along with their close contacts.


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Published 26 October 2021 2:27pm
Updated 26 October 2021 3:00pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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