Dublin faces additional restrictions, including delay in reopening pubs due to fears over increased cases



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The government will decide this morning whether to raise Dublin’s alert level above the rest of the state under its new five-tier Living with Covid-19 plan in the medium term, as serious concerns about infection rates continue in the capital.

What is at stake is whether to keep it at the second most benign level of the five-level plan, Level 2, despite the fact that the number of cases multiplied by twenty in the course of a month in the capital, or to raise it to Level 3.

However, if it remains at Level 2, Dublin’s population of 1.4 million will be subject to additional restrictions, including a delay in the reopening of wet pubs from the scheduled date of September 21, as well as a new measure that will say that members of only one household will be able to visit another household. It is also understood that consideration is being given to suspending all nursing home and nursing home visits.

However, the other scenario that high-level ministers were discussing last night was to designate Dublin at Level 3, but to modify some of the more severe restrictions associated with the elevated level.

In five hours of successive meetings yesterday involving the cabinet subcommittee on Covid-19 and the three party leaders, Taoiseach Micheál Martin, Tánaiste Leo Varadkar, and Green Party leader Eamon Ryan, the main focus was the deterioration of the situation in Dublin.

“They were long meetings,” said a senior government source. “Dublin is a big concern.”

The source said, however, that it would have been “premature” to assign the more serious Level 3 status to Dublin, as a full analysis of the situation in the capital has not yet been carried out.

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