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WA records 20 new cases on a day confusion reigned supreme

If you suspect you or a family member has coronavirus you should call (not visit) your GP or ring the national Coronavirus Health Information Hotline on 1800 020 080.

Fran Rimrod and Kate Hedley
Updated ,first published

What we know so far

  • Total COVID-19 cases in WA now at 140 with 20 new cases announced on Monday.
  • The Department of Health is currently carrying out contact tracing for all new confirmed cases.
  • There are now more than 335,000 cases around the world, and the death toll is approaching 15,000.
  • The total number of confirmed cases in Australia is 1709.
  • The government's $189b stimulus package will give Australians early access to $20,000 from their superannuation if they face financial hardship.

Good night and stay safe

By Fran Rimrod

Thank you for staying with us - this concludes our coverage for today.

We are keen to hear more about the cruise ship headed for Fremantle, and if the passengers on board require medical assistance.

Please join us again tomorrow for updates as they come to hand.

No critical illness aboard cruise ship

By Nathan Hondros

A cruise ship headed for Fremantle that Premier Mark McGowan said was carrying hundreds of passengers with "upper respiratory illnesses" has no one aboard with respiratory disease or any flu-like symptoms.

This is despite the Premier and Police Commissioner Chris Dawson fronting the media on Monday morning to reveal a "dynamic and critical emergency" as the 1700-passenger MSC Magnifica prepared to dock as early as Monday night.

The news sparked confusion inside WA's hospitals and a scramble to prepare for more than 250 possible COVID-19 cases which might require urgent medical attention.

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Perth schools start to shut down, one by one

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'Worst since 1932': Two million Aussies face unemployment queue

By Shane Wright and Eryk Bagshaw

More than two million Australians could be out of work with unemployment expected to soar as businesses begin shutting their doors and standing down or sacking workers.

Queues of laid-off workers snaked around Centrelink offices in scenes reminiscent of the Great Depression.

Under unprecedented sudden demand, the Centrelink website crashed and phone lines jammed.

Those in the line now face a month-long wait to receive $1100 a fortnight in unemployment benefits.

Cat Haven bracing for influx of surrenders

By Hannah Barry

Staff at a Perth animal shelter say while there had been a slow increase in the number of pet surrenders in recent weeks, they expected the full impact of the economic recession to hit WA's feline population in a few months' time.

Cat Haven is bracing for an influx of dumped cats in the next few months.iStockphoto

"After all these job losses people sadly won’t be financially able to care for their cats – so the next few months are when we expect to get increased surrenders," a Cat Haven spokeswoman said.

The animal rescue centre had experienced an influx of people willing to foster cats throughout the COVID-19 crisis, but the facility said it would need to start making room for the predicted population boom.

"Due to social distancing recommendations we are operating bookings to view cats for adoption via our Facebook page and have strict measures about how many people can be in the adoption area and reception area at one time, as well as processing adoptions outside away from others," the spokeswoman said.

"As long as people can commit to caring for a cat long-term and can afford food, vet treatment and health care costs, now is the perfect time to adopt, particularly if people are working from home – [it's] much easier to introduce a cat while you are home to provide reassurance."

Cruise ship confusion continues

By Lauren Pilat

The WA Health Department has denied suggestions from AMA WA that one of the state’s major hospitals was being shut down, and another was having an "internal emergency".

A Health Department staffer confirmed to WAtoday that Fiona Stanley Hospital was not on 'code brown' and would not be shut down.

The confirmation came after AMA WA president Andrew Miller told media on Monday that doctors told him FSH was shutting down, and Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital was in 'code yellow', which according to the WA Health Department referred to an internal emergency.

“The hospital is undertaking a recommissioning of transfer of patients out,” he said.

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WA couple stranded on other side of the country

By Hannah Barry

A West Australian couple are facing the prospect of more than six months away from their home town of Geraldton after finding themselves stranded indefinitely in Tamworth.

Bob Jennings, 73, and his wife Lee, 64, made the decision to abort their Queensland holiday and return home to WA last week when states began announcing border closures.

But when the couple were forced to stop at a Tamworth caravan park after car trouble, they found themselves slowly running out of time to make it back to WA before the state’s border closed.

Bob said the couple now faced the prospect of waiting until next Wednesday before they were up and running, and they hadn't been able to get more information about what their prospects were.

Medical professionals shouldn't be 'pawns' in decision making: AMA

By Lauren Pilat

AMA WA president Andrew Miller is calling on the government to meet urgently with the state’s top healthcare professionals to ensure frontline workers were not “pawns” when it comes to important decisions being made.

AMA WA President Dr Andrew Miller. Nathan Hondros

Dr Miller said he had received thousands of messages from frontline doctors saying they were dissatisfied with the way the government had managed the pandemic.

“We’re at risk of having more cases than anywhere else in the country,” he said.

“I have never seen frontline doctors, as dedicated as passionate.

West Coast Fever updates fans

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Second WA school closes voluntarily

By Emma Young

A second West Australian school has announced a decision to close with St Mark’s Anglican Community School in Hillarys moving to a distance learning program, following an earlier announcement from St Andrew’s Grammar in Dianella.

St Mark's is strongly urging families to keep children at home commencing Tuesday.

Where families could not take care of children at home, including those whose parents were frontline health or essential workers, supervision would be provided at school during normal school hours.

The school hours remained unchanged for them and they would also participate, supervised by staff, in the distance learning program.

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