Rochdale is not falling quickly.
01.07.2020 - 20:03 / manchestereveningnews.co.uk
Council leaders in Bradford and Barnsley have said they are not following Leicester into a local lockdown after figures revealed they had the second and third highest Covid-19 infection rates in England.Bradford has said it is “working hard” to prevent another lockdown, while Barnsley stressed new restrictions are not needed.The latest data shows Bradford has 69.4 cases per 100,000 population, the second highest in England behind Leicester with 140.2.And Barnsley is third in the table with 54.7
.Rochdale is not falling quickly.
straight to your inboxManchester United's top-four rivals Leicester City will be without James Maddison, Ben Chilwell and Christian Fuchs for the remainder of the season, Brendan Rodgers has confirmed. Leicester returned to winning ways on Thursday with a 2-0 victory over Sheffield United, maintaining their narrow advantage over United in the hunt for a top-four finish.
coronavirus lockdowns.The concert tours, part of Live Nation Entertainment’s summer season, were due to begin in August and expected to visit 12 cities including London, Leeds, Bristol, and Liverpool.With performances staged at sites including airports and racecourses, acts including Kaiser Chiefs, The Streets, Wiley and Dizzee Rascal were expected to give fans gigs with a private individual viewing zone next to their cars.Now, a statement from Live Nation said the Utilita Live From The Drive-In
Car Park Party at the Trafford Centre also called off.
Covid-19 infections continues to increase, public health chiefs in England have warned. Data released on Friday shows there were 18 new cases per 100,000 residents in Carlisle in the week ending July 3, compared with eight new cases the week before.
coronavirus rate in Leicester is falling, Health Secretary Matt Hancock told MPs.
the Mirror reports.Everyone but essential workers will be barred from leaving and entering the region, which is about 100 miles west of Barcelona.More than 60 new cases of Covid-19 were announced on Friday across 30-plus affected municipalities, which are home to more than 200,000 people.The total number of cases in the region is just over 4,000, according to the Ministry of Health.
lockdown after Covid-19 cases spiked. New figures have revealed the Yorkshire town and city have some of the highest virus rates in England.
coronavirus means Leicester is the first city in the UK to be put under a local lockdown in a bid to curb the deadly virus.As pubs, restaurants and cafes get ready to reopen across the nation, residents in the East Midland's city have been told to stay at home.The move is part of what Prime Minister Boris Johnson previously referred to as a "whack-a-mole" strategy of tackling local flare ups.UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the measures will be reviewed in two weeks, but what exactly is a
The government last night announced that Leicester had become the first UK city to go back into lockdown.Following an apparent spike of coronavirus cases in the city, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said that restrictions will tighten for those living in the city - despite having been eased for only a matter of weeks.One of the biggest changes to restrictions has been that to shopping rules, and it has given us an idea of what a local lockdown could look like for the rest of us if it were to
lockdown and will not see restrictions eased with the rest of England. Non-essential shops in the city will close from Tuesday and schools will be shut to most pupils from Thursday as part of restrictions imposed after a rise in coronavirus cases, Health Secretary Matt Hancock told MPs.
Tight lockdown restrictions have been reimposed in Leicester as the city sees a spike in coronavirus cases.Non-essential shops will close from tomorrow (Tuesday 30) and schools will close to most pupils on Thursday (2 July), Health Secretary Matt Hancock said.The city has recorded 866 new cases of coronavirus in the last two weeks.Mr Hancock said the easing of the lockdown planned for the rest of England on July 4 cannot happen in Leicester because of rising cases.He said: “Given the growing