NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian, like her Victorian counterpart Dan Andrews, has warned of new and continuing lockdowns.She has told 2GB's Ben Fordham:
“If we need to go further we will.
“I can’t guarantee that we won’t need to go further across the board in curtailing existing ability for people to do what they’re doing.”
Meanwhile she has has not told us why her lockdown failed to in its purpose, ie to prevent the community contagion which Berejiklian says is a new and evolving development. Gladys and Scott Fraquhar, and his Atlassian, owe us an explanation for the massively expensive 3 month lockdown that the Berejiklian government imposed on this state.
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The Premier of NSW,Gladys Berejiklian has declared this week that the WuhanCovid virus outbreak in Victoria is the first instance of community contagion of the virus in Australia.
The same premier imposed a strict statewide lockdown from late March to early July on the basis that she was working to "flatten the curve".
Berejiklian relied on data and modelling from Atlassian's Scott Farquhar, which she has refused to place in the public domain. Farquhar and Atliassian were also reported to have devised if not proposed the COVID App, which seems to have done nothing.
Coronavirus: Atlassian boss Scott Farquhar’s insight handed Gladys Berejiklian a lead
NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian gets her morning coffee from her local cafe in Sydney’s Northbride on Friday as restrictions eased slightly. Picture: Nikki Short
EXCLUSIVE
YONI BASHAN
NSW POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT
@yoni_bashanMAY 2, 2020
NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian turned to tech billionaire Scott Farquhar during the darkest hours of the COVID-19 pandemic, revealing that his data and modelling expertise put the state on an early war footing that helped prevent the horrific death tolls occurring elsewhere.
In an interview with The Weekend Australian, the Premier also outlined how she planned to reposition NSW as a global manufacturing leader to hedge against inevitable budget deficits caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
As NSW eased its first social restrictions on Friday, Ms Berejiklian spoke of how her personal relationship with Mr Farquhar and other leading industry figures had been key to moving early with social restrictions that flattened the infection curve and secured the state against disaster.
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She said Mr Farquhar, co-chief executive of Atlassian, had stepped in at a time when the extent and severity of the virus was still unclear.
He assisted with establishing the initial modelling that informed Ms Berejiklian’s “war cabinet’’ to move quickly against the virus; it was also Mr Farquhar who urged the Premier to publicise as much data as possible, so the community would heed the message of self-isolation.
“Scott Farquhar is a legend,” Ms Berejiklian told The Weekend Australian. “You don’t just need to be a health expert to manage a pandemic, you need to be a data expert and know what modelling shows you — and he is amazing. He helped me in the early days of the pandemic with data and managing data.”
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Mr Farquhar and Ms Berejiklian are understood to speak often, but he took a central role in identifying the severity of the pandemic during late February, when most countries were still moving cautiously against the virus. At that stage, in Australia, the likelihood of mass infections was, to some, a possibility rather than a certainty.
NSW subsequently became one of the strongest advocates in national cabinet meetings of stronger lockdown measures and school closures.
Asked to confirm his role, the 40-year-old told The Weekend Australian that Atlassian, which assisted with building the COVIDSafe app, was always “willing and able” to assist the government. The company also assisted the federal government with its WhatsApp messaging service bot.
“COVID-19 is one of the biggest issues that government and business have ever had to face, so we’re proud to work together and help out however we can,” he said.
On Friday, NSW eased the first of its social restrictions implemented on March 30, allowing for up to two adults to visit another household to provide “care and support”, regardless of the distance required to travel.
Additional restrictions, such as those around schools and retail trade, have also been earmarked for relaxation, with the government moving to take its first cautious steps out of its crisis phase and into a longer-term effort focused on recovery.
With tourism, education and other sources of revenue flattened by the pandemic, Ms Berejiklian has now turned her eye to the dormant manufacturing sector. She says it could provide a lifeline for the state against the dreaded and deepening budget deficits being forecast. She wants NSW to position itself during and after the crisis to become a manufacturing leader through the use of artificial intelligence and 3D printing, which would make production cheaper. There is no reason, she says, why the sector should not form the backbone of the state’s economic recovery.
“Out of these hours of darkness there are green shoots in terms of establishing new supply chains, establishing new industry, and that … gives me hope about NSW.”
YONI BASHAN
STATE POLITICAL REPORTER
Yoni Bashan is The Australian's NSW political correspondent. He began his career at The Sunday Telegraph and has won multiple awards for crime writing and specialist investigations. In 2014 he was seconded on a... Read more
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