Welcome to Northern Slant’s weekly round-up of local virus-related items you might have missed. 

This is our final update and previous updates are here, for the weeks ending:

You might like to read the thoughts of some of our contributors – and perhaps add your own – on  ‘Hopes for Northern Ireland.’

See Also:

And read a first-person account from the beginning of the pandemic by NS contributor Callum McNeill here:

***

Schools go back as Covid rate rises again

The first Northern Ireland children went back to school this week, with a total of some 80,000 pupils due to return to classes at the beginning of September. There have been some concerns among parents, despite assurances from the Chief Medical Officer that it is safe to return.

Meanwhile, the Executive’s Chief Scientific Adviser said there had been an “almost 15-fold increase in daily cases” since the beginning of the summer and that the infection rate – or R number – is currently between 1 and 1.6.

***

Challenges ahead for local Economy

Economy Minister Diane Dodds warned that 100,000 people or more could be unemployed in Northern Ireland by the end of the year. “We need to face the fact that there will be difficult days ahead,” she said. Her department’s top civil servant, meanwhile, cautioned that the full effect of the crisis on the local economy had not yet begun.

***

Other virus news items this week

***

Calls for hope and calls to action

Northern Slant aims to highlight some of the good news stories happening all around us. We’ll also show how communities are responding to the crisis, sharing details of how you might be able to get involved yourself. 

Calls for Hope

Calls for Action

***

Information and Resources

Keep up with the latest updates from the Northern Ireland Department of Health here.

And from Belfast City Council here.

Thanks for reading our Virus Updates over the past few months, we hope you found them useful. Have a good weekend.