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15
Jan 2021
Fear needs to be put back into the public to bring coronavirus rates down during lockdown, the police officer leading North Yorkshire's response to covid said yesterday.
Superintendent Mike Walker said there was less compliance and fear among people under current restrictions compared with the first lockdown last year, which saw streets empty and more businesses close.
His comments came after North Yorkshire Police said it will come down harder on covid rule breakers. The force also revealed it had issued 107 fines in the first week of the third lockdown — more than double the amount in the first week of the first lockdown.
Superintendent Walker told a meeting of the North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Panel that the force has had to “put back that fear” into communities for them to understand the risk of flouting covid rules.
He said:
Superintendent Walker said the messaging was not scaremongering as the figures in the county are so high. Currently, the North Yorkshire seven-day covid rate is 380 people per 100,000.
He added it was “sad to see” a lack of compliance when North Yorkshire had some of the highest rates in all of Yorkshire.
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