NSW Member for Murray Helen Dalton has joined with Victorian Member for Mildura Ali Cupper and Victorian Member for Northern Victoria Tania Maxwell in appealing directly to Scott Morrison on the impact of the NSW-Victorian border closure and urging him to extend the ‘border bubble'.
“While we fully support sensible restrictions to stop the spread of the coronavirus, the implementation of the NSW-Victoria border closure is devastating cross-border communities who have been co-dependent on each other for more than a century,” the joint letter reads.
“Moreover, there is no evidence the extreme measures impacting on border residents are necessary — especially considering residents of Sydney COVID hotspots remain free to travel around the state.
“The key problem is the NSW Government’s very narrow and illogical definition of the so-called border zone — a zone that allows permit-based travel for work, education, health and to purchase essential goods.
“Many NSW towns have been excluded from the border zone, even though they are entirely dependent on Victoria for their goods, services and as their source of education, employment and health care.”
Mrs Dalton said the sudden closure of the NSW-Victoria border on July 8 had seen her office bombarded with hundreds of residents unable to get to work, see their doctor or buy basic goods and services.
“The NSW Government closed the border without any consultation with local members or councils. I’ve spent all week pleading with ministers to implement sensible exemptions, but they’re responding far too slowly,” the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers Party member said.
“People’s lives are at risk. The Prime Minister must step in.”
The letter states: “A simple solution would be to widen the border zone from Bendigo in Victoria to Wagga in NSW — allowing travel within this zone for purposes such as work, education, health care, the purchase of goods and services and compassionate visits to family members in need of care.
“As there are relatively few cases coronavirus cases within this zone, allowing essential travel would pose few health risks. But it would alleviate the enormous health, social and economic upheaval currently faced by residents in these areas.”
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