Nicola Sturgeon says Scots lockdown can loosen from next week

Nicola Sturgeon says Scots could be able to have neighbours round for a BBQ and play tennis from next weekend – but insists people should stay home as much as possible

  • Nicola Sturgeon has unveiled the Scottish ‘road map’ for easing the coronavirus lockdown from May 28
  • Sunbathing and more outdoor exercise, including sports will be allowed under Ms Sturgeon’s new blueprint 
  • People are set be able to mix with another household in their garden as long as it is only in ‘small numbers’ 
  • The loosening goes further than announced for England by Boris Johnson last week, with gardens off limits 
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

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Nicola Sturgeon unveiled her own ‘road map’ out of lockdown today with households set to be allowed to mix in ‘small numbers’ in their gardens from next week.

The First minister said Scotland can take the first cautious steps towards easing the draconian curbs from May 28, suggesting the loosening will go further than has been implemented in England so far.

As long as the outbreak remains under control, outdoor exercise and some sports will be permitted, with people allowed to sit in parks and sunbathe.

There would also be a green light for households meeting up in their gardens, as long as only in ‘small numbers’ and observing social distancing rules – suggesting barbecues could be back on the agenda.

By contrast, in England you can only mix with one person from another household, and it must be in a public place rather than in gardens. 

However, schools in Scotland will not start reopening until at least August 11 – after the summer break north of the border. Ms Sturgeon said it would be ‘a blended model of part time in-school and part time at-home learning’.

Ms Sturgeon told MSPs that the threat of a second wave is ‘very real’, but said she believed the crucial R virus reproduction rate had been below one for three weeks, even it was slightly higher in Scotland than elsewhere in th UK.   

Nicola Sturgeon told MSPs that the threat of a second wave is ‘very real’, but said she believed the crucial R rate had been below one for three weeks

Nicola Sturgeon unveiled her own 'road map' out of lockdown today with households set to be allowed to mix in 'small numbers' in their gardens from next week

Nicola Sturgeon unveiled her own ‘road map’ out of lockdown today with households set to be allowed to mix in ‘small numbers’ in their gardens from next week

Ms Sturgeon said people ‘will be able to travel – preferably by walking or cycling – to a location near their local community for recreation’, but they should ‘stay within or close to their own local area’ if possible. 

She said: ‘Waste and recycling services will resume, as will many outdoor businesses, such as agriculture and forestry. 

‘The construction industry will be able to carefully implement steps one and two of its six-step restart plan which it has developed with us. However, let me be clear that there must be genuine partnership with trade unions – this can only be done if it is done safely.’ 

Ms Sturgeon stressed that current hygiene measures should continue to be complied with, which she said would be the ‘biggest single factor in controlling the virus’.

Ms Sturgeon said that the road map proposals ‘cannot be set in stone’.

She added: ‘We will conduct formal reviews at least every three weeks to assess if and to what extent we can move from one phase to the next, but we will be constantly alive to when we can go faster, or whether we have gone too far.

‘It may be that we can’t do everything in a particular phase at the same time. A single phase may span more than one review period. Some measures may be lifted earlier than planned, some later.’

The First Minister said that efforts to stem the spread of the virus have ‘had an impact’, with an estimate of 25,000 people believed to be infectious north of the border.

The latest estimate of the reproduction rate – or R number – for the virus, Ms Sturgeon told MSPs, remained between 0.7 and one and the number would be published every Thursday from now – which had been pushed for by opposition parties.

In March, the First Minister said, the R number was estimated to have been 4, meaning one person was infecting four others. When the R number is below 1 the rate of spread is limited.

She added: ‘The total number of Covid deaths – 351 last week alone – is still far too high.

‘And although we estimate that the R number is below 1, the range has not changed this week, and there is still uncertainty about just how far below 1 it is. It may also still be slightly above other parts of the UK.’