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As it happened: Victoria records 1313 new COVID-19 cases, four lives lost; NSW records 261 new local cases, one death; heavy rain lashes parts of the country

Broede Carmody and Michaela Whitbourn
Updated ,first published

The day in review

By Michaela Whitbourn, Broede Carmody and Sarah McPhee

Good evening and thank you for reading our live coverage of the day’s events. Remembrance Day services were held across the country today and politicians including Prime Minister Scott Morrison, NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet and Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews (pictured below) paid their respects at war memorials this morning.

If you are just joining us, here’s what you need to know:

  • In a surprise move, China and the United States unveiled a pact at the Glasgow climate talks, pledging tougher action this decade on global warming. Chinese climate envoy Xie Zhenhua described climate change as an “existential crisis” as he made the joint declaration with his US counterpart John Kerry. As North America correspondent Matthew Knott writes, “the language of the pact is broad and aspirational, and it contains no specific new promises on emissions reductions targets or accelerated timelines. But it offers renewed hope to countries around the world that US President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping will be able to ... work together on the defining challenge of their age: stopping runaway climate change before it’s too late”. Read more here.

John Kerry, US Special Presidential Envoy for Climate.AP
  • The national jobs market is poised for a pre-Christmas rush as people across NSW, Victoria and the ACT emerge from lockdowns, according to national economics correspondent Shane Wright. Figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Thursday showed a surprisingly large 0.6 percentage point lift in the jobless rate to a five-month high of 5.2 per cent in October.

‘Intense rainfall’: 34mm in 30 minutes in Dubbo

By Sarah McPhee

Dubbo has been the site of intense rainfall in NSW this evening with 34 millimetres falling within half an hour.

There was no rain in the regional city today until it surged from 1.4mm at 4.30pm, to 23mm by 5pm and up to 40.2mm by 5.30pm.

“Dubbo Airport recorded 34.2mm over 30 minutes up to 5.14pm,” the bureau said.

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A severe thunderstorm warning was issued shortly after 6pm for people in the NSW Central West Slopes and Plains and parts of Central Tablelands, South West Slopes, Riverina, Lower Western and Upper Western forecast districts.

Victorian vaccine mandate deadline approaches for construction, aged care workers

By

Victorian construction and aged care workers have only days to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 so that they can continue working under the state’s vaccine mandate rules.

The Chief Health Officer’s update said on Thursday that the double-dosed deadline kicks in for all employees and contractors working on Victorian construction sites on Saturday.

For workers in residential aged care facilities, it comes into effect next Monday.

There are exceptions for workers with a valid vaccination exemption.

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Jump in unemployment rate ‘a blip’ as people rejoin jobs market

By Shane Wright

The national jobs market is poised for a pre-Christmas rush as people across NSW, Victoria and the ACT emerge from lockdowns, with growing evidence efforts to stem the spread of the coronavirus have failed to inflict long-term damage on the economy.

Figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Thursday showed the surprisingly large 0.6 percentage point lift in the jobless rate to a five-month high of 5.2 per cent in October.

The Christmas tree in Martin Place last year.Getty Images

Almost 46,000 jobs across the nation, mostly in Victoria, disappeared during the month while the number of people described as unemployed climbed by 81,000 to 707,300.

The result was partly due to the timing of the employment survey, which occurred in late September and the first week of October. It pre-dated the opening of the two largest-employing states that have both reported an increase in employment as restrictions have eased.

Read the full story here.

Six flood rescues as NSW authorities warn of ‘dangerous’ conditions

By Sarah McPhee

Emergency services in northern NSW made six rescues within 24 hours when campers and motorists were trapped by floodwaters, as authorities warn of thunderstorms bringing intense rainfall and dangerous road conditions into Friday.

The Bureau of Meteorology has issued a severe weather warning for heavy rainfall from Thursday afternoon for the North West Slopes and Plains, Northern Tablelands and parts of the Northern Rivers, Mid North Coast, Hunter, Central Tablelands, Central West Slopes and Plains, South West Slopes and Riverina.

A violent thunderstorm east of Mudgee on Wednesday.Nick Moir

A wind gust of 104 km/h was recorded at Tibooburra, in the state’s far north-west, at 12.27pm.

A low-pressure system is interacting with a tropical air mass, producing heavy rain and widespread thunderstorms. It is expected to clear in the state’s north by midday on Friday and in the south into Saturday as it moves offshore.

Read the full story here.

Melbourne, Geelong private hospitals to resume elective surgeries at half-capacity from Monday

By Cassandra Morgan

Private hospitals and day surgeries in Melbourne and Geelong will be able to resume performing elective surgeries at 50 per cent their normal capacity from Monday.

The Victorian government made the announcement on Thursday, saying the change was possible thanks to current COVID-19 hospitalisation numbers that allowed for a “safe and modest restart of non-urgent elective surgery in the private sector”.

Victorian Health Minister Martin Foley.Paul Jeffers

The private hospitals and day procedure centres would be able to operate at half their usual elective surgery lists as long as enough capacity was kept aside to help with the coronavirus response.

“This will ensure that non-COVID public patients can continue to be treated at private hospitals, to help free up beds for COVID patients at our public hospitals,” the government said in a statement.

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Unemployment up as COVID-19 payments end

By Noel Towell

Hundreds of thousands of Victorians who are relying on federal COVID-19 payments face a bleak future when support is cut off next week, the state’s peak welfare lobby says.

Victorian Council of Social Services chief executive Emma King said many recipients would be forced back onto the dole instead of moving into work.

“The future is pretty bleak, for about 200,000 Victorians who are receiving the kind of disaster payments now because the jobs market hasn’t bounced back,” Ms King said.

New figures from the Commonwealth Treasury show that 200,000 Victorians are still receiving income support payments.Rhett Wyman

More than 500,000 Victorians came off federal COVID-19 income support payments when the state hit its 70 per cent double-vaccination milestone last month.

But new figures from the Commonwealth Treasury show that 200,000 of the state’s residents are still receiving the payment.

Read the full story here.

Coffee, lunch set to cost you up to 20% more as worker shortages bite

By Henrietta Cook

Coffee, burgers, pasta and other popular menu items are set to cost customers up to 20 per cent more as hospitality businesses grapple with rising ingredient prices and a shortage of staff.

Some cafes and restaurants have already started putting up the cost of drinks and meals, with the peak body for the hospitality sector warning that price hikes will soon become more prevalent.

Esther Sun, owner of Mum’s Burger Kitchen in Boronia. Paul Jeffers

Esther Sun, who owns Mum’s Burger Kitchen in Boronia in Melbourne’s east, recently increased the cost of her gourmet burgers by as much as $2.

Ms Sun said the price of a bread roll had risen by 20¢, beef had skyrocketed from $11 to $17 a kilogram and the charcoal she cooks her burgers over has doubled in price.

‘Dust off your dancing shoes’: restrictions set to ease in Canberra

By Michaela Whitbourn

A number of coronavirus restrictions are set to ease in the ACT from 11.59pm tonight, as Canberrans roll up their sleeves in nation-leading numbers to get vaccinated.

More than 95 per cent (95.8 per cent) of people aged 12 and up in the ACT are now fully vaccinated against COVID-19. The territory recorded nine new coronavirus cases today but nobody is in hospital with the virus and there have been no further deaths.

Density limits in Canberra’s venues will be increased tonight to allow one person for every 2 square metres and dancing is back on the agenda.

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“Canberra, it’s time to dust off your dancing shoes because restrictions will ease for nightclubs and licensed venues from 11:59pm tonight,” ACT Health tweeted this afternoon.

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US-China climate pact ‘mostly broad and aspirational’

By Matthew Knott

As we’ve been reporting throughout the blog today, China and the United States unveiled a surprise new pact at the Glasgow climate talks. They’ve described global warming as an existential crisis that demands co-operation between the superpowers.

John Kerry, US Special Presidential Envoy for Climate.Getty Images

North America correspondent Matthew Knott writes today that the pact is encouraging, but there is more work to be done:

The pact legitimises two key decisions US President Joe Biden made after his election victory last year.

Firstly, to appoint John Kerry (a distinguished former secretary-of-state and presidential nominee) to the new role of global climate envoy.

And secondly, to attempt to isolate climate change from the fundamental complaints America has with China over trade and human rights issues.

While Secretary of State Antony Blinken and national security adviser Jake Sullivan are required to juggle an array of competing priorities when it comes to China, Kerry has had a single-minded focus: identifying potential areas for co-operation on climate change. And he’s worked hard at it, travelling to China twice and meeting with his Chinese counterpart dozens of times in the lead-up to Glasgow.

The language of the US-China “Glasgow Declaration” is mostly broad and aspirational. It contains no specific new promises on emissions reductions targets or accelerated timelines.

But it offers renewed hope to countries around the world that US President Joe Biden and Chinese Leader Xi Jinping will be able to work together on the defining challenge of their age: stopping runaway climate change before it’s too late.

Read the full analysis here.

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