The $195 million hotel quarantine program was largely put on ice in June – running only as emergency accommodation for frontline health and emergency workers, the homeless, and victims of family violence – after the virus leaked from within Rydges on Swanston and Stamford Plaza Hotel.It seeded 99 per cent of cases in Victoria’s disastrous second wave, which killed 801 people and wreaked social and economic havoc as a result of sustained lockdowns.A government spokeswoman said the ongoing recruitment and training of the quarantine task force was critical to ensuring Victoria was well-prepared for the return of international travellers.“Resident Support Officers and Team Leaders received extensive inductions and training on the new operating model – including live on-site simulations,” she said.“They provided critical support to existing quarantine accommodation programs and the coronavirus response through other roles, including assisting with the emergency accommodation quarantine program, which supported Victorians who are homeless and victims of family violence.“They were also based at the Park Royal Hotel, supporting returned travellers and maritime workers who had gained exemptions to return to Victoria on compassionate or medical grounds, as well as undertaking doorknocking contact tracing activities for DHHS.”The government would not comment on how much it paid for empty rooms saying the arrangements were commercial-in-confidence.International flights into Victoria resumed on December 7, with new agency COVID-19 Quarantine Victoria taking control of the new hotel quarantine program.
shannon.deery@news.com.au
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