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At a press conference with the public services union on Wednesday, he drew up an exemplary intermediate balance: around 50 people have worked more than 40,000 hours in the crisis team since March 13 and made 10,500 contacts.
Schools are currently a particular challenge, according to Hageneder. So far there have been no clusters in the cultural sector, some in sports. It is not possible to say exactly how many infections the system can no longer cope with each day, because that depends on the contacts of those affected. A total of 100 to 150 contacts can be made per day in the district. He has had good experiences with the six members of the Armed Forces who support this work as part of an assistance mission, as well as with additional recruited students.
13 penalties for violating quarantine
Since mid-March, 3,729 people have been quarantined out of 918 people who tested positive in the district. At age 13, the number of sentences handed down for ignoring segregation is comparatively low. The 129 curfew controls, which only took place in the last three weeks, have already led to eleven administrative criminal proceedings.
According to a survey carried out by the IMAS Institute on behalf of the Upper Austrian Public Service Union, conducted from mid-June to mid-July with 1,020 people over the age of 16, 61 percent of Austrians believe that the crown crisis it is particularly challenging for health authorities and the administration. This places them second behind healthcare jobs (78 percent) in the professional groups affected by Corona.
The way of working in the office has changed since Corona, home office, telecommuting and electronic appointments were established here. Hagenauer hopes that some things will stay that way: Online allocated appointment slots, for example, have also significantly reduced wait times for citizens. According to the IMAS survey, 82 percent of Austrians also assume that the digital accessibility of authorities will increase.