Leaders of councils threatened by Leicester-style lockdowns reject the idea saying they are based on flawed data – so how bad is the situation in YOUR local area?

  • Bradford, Barnsley and Rochdale all have high coronavirus infection rates with 50+ positive tests per 100,000
  • Barnsley Council yesterday ruled out a local lockdown and said cases are coming down but urged 'extra care' 
  • Data seen by the Daily Telegraph supports claims infection rates in these locations have instead dropped
  • Barnsley's council leader Sir Stephen Houghton said authorities 'don't believe we need additional restrictions'

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Council leaders in areas threatened by Leicester-style lockdowns have rejected the idea - while claiming figures released by the Government detailing the highest coronavirus infection rates are out-of-date.

Bradford, Barnsley and Rochdale were identified as three of the areas of England most at risk of being hit by a 'local lockdown' like the one imposed in Leicester to control Covid-19, according to Public Health England data. 

Statistics for the week ending June 21 — the most recently available — show those areas had the highest Covid-19 infection rates in the country, each with more than 50 positive tests per 100,000 people. Only Leicester recorded more (140.2).  

But leaders in the worst-affected areas have asserted they can see no reason to subject their regions to similar restrictions, while complaining the data released by Public Health England on its website was out of date.

Figures seen by the Daily Telegraph  supported their claims that infection rates in these badly-hit locations had dropped in the seven days to June 27. 

According to this data, the number of positive cases of Covid-19 per 100,000 people fell from 53.8 to 34.7 in Barnsley, South Yorkshire.

Council leader Sir Stephen Houghton said authorities 'don't believe we need additional restrictions like Leicester', which was subject to extended lockdown measures on Monday.

'We need to monitor the situation, particularly with restrictions being eased this weekend, and for that we need more granular detail of the location of test results,' he said, adding PHE should make detailed information about the locations of outbreaks more readily available.        

Barnsley Council had moved to squash rumours of a local lockdown there as Public Health England (PHE) data emerged showing its high infection rate on Wednesday. Town leaders called for 'extra care and vigilance', Sky News reported, but denied measures like those seen in Leicester will be necessary. 

In a joint statement, the council's director for public health Julia Burrows and lead councillor Sir Steve said: 'The number of cases is Barnsley is higher than the national average. 

'We are seeing transmission in the community across the borough, and like many places across the country have had clusters and outbreaks in a handful of care homes, schools and workplaces, as we expected would happen.' 

They said the clusters have 'started to ease thanks to local control measures and we are seeing the early signs of a return to the reduction in daily cases', which means 'we do not believe at this stage any further measures will need to be implemented such as the ones seen in Leicester'.        

Rochdale council chief executive Steve Rumbelow added: 'We're not at all as bad as Leicester. The one thing we don't have from PHE, which is crucial in managing the local situation, is the detailed data from the testing.'

In Bradford, where data seen by the Telegraph showed infections per 100,000 have dropped from 72.8 to 42.8, MPs asked why PHE only began sharing detailed testing results on June 22.   

Naz Shah, the Labour MP for Bradford West, said: 'Surely more should have been done to communicate with local authorities so that badly affected areas were able to implement local precautions to mitigate the risk of a surge in cases.'             

Bradford, Doncaster and Barnsley are said to be at the top of the Government's list of potential Covid hotspots as the virus continues to run rampant in Yorkshire (shown in red)

Public Health England publishes some weekly data from Pillar 2 tests but not detailed numbers. Its most recent report shows Bradford, Doncaster and Barnsley currently have some of the highest rates of infection in England outside of Leicester (shown in red)

It comes as government sources said local lockdowns could be 'just days away'. But ministers have yet to officially confirm which parts of England are in the firing line. 

Other areas that may face being plunged into another lockdown include Bedford, Oldham, Rotherham, Tameside, Blackburn with Darwen and Kirklees, which all have more than 30 cases per 100,000 people.

At the other end of the scale, in the week from June 15 to June 21,  West Berkshire, South Tyneside and the City of London all recorded zero coronavirus cases per 100,000 population. And the rate was lower than one in South Gloucestershire, Wokingham, Gloucestershire, Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly, Redcar and Cleveland, Torbay, Lambeth and Portsmouth.

The Government came under fire for not publishing detailed numbers of cases for local areas, missing off tens of thousands of 'Pillar 2' test results received from private contractors that run public testing centres. The official decision not to publish Pillar 2 data, which now make up the vast majority of confirmed cases, could be missing out more than 80 per cent of cases from public information. 

Even local councils and public health officials say they aren't being given the right information and are battling to find out what's happening in their areas. One NHS doctor working in Yorkshire called the discovery 'another Tory scandal' and said: 'Covering up what is happening is about as dangerous and stupid as it gets'.

As police pledged to stop and fine drivers trying to flee Leicester for drinking or shopping after the city, it was also revealed:

  • Officers will carry out spot checks on vehicles leaving locked-down Leicester and could turn them around if their journey is not essential; 
  • Walkers confirmed 28 positive Covid-19 cases at its crisp factory in Leicester, which employs 1,400 people across the site in the Beaumont Leys area of the city;
  • Boris Johnson denied failing to share crucial Covid-19 infection data with Leicester authorities as Keir Starmer slammed the 'lost week' while the disease was allowed to run riot before city was locked down;
  • The coronavirus death toll in Leicester's hospitals increased to 399 as officials confirmed seven more deaths even in today's NHS statistics;
  • Garment manufacturers in Leicester vowed to defy the city's local coronavirus lockdown, protesting that they cannot afford to lose any more money even if it means putting lives at risk;
  • Leicester-style localised lockdowns are 'just days away' from being imposed after dozens of towns and cities saw coronavirus cases surge in the past week, government sources claimed. 

Health Secretary Matt Hancock confirmed lockdown measures will be extended in the East Midlands city for at least two weeks after a dramatic surge in coronavirus cases, with non-essential shops closed again and schools shut from Thursday. It will not be reviewed again until July 18, according to Government documents.  

Pubs in the city will not be allowed to be reopen this weekend to celebrate 'Super Saturday', nor will people be allowed to visit friends and relatives — unlike everywhere else in the country.

MORE LOCAL LOCKDOWNS ARE JUST 'WEEKS AWAY' 

Leicester-style localised lockdowns are 'just days away' from being imposed after dozens of towns and cities saw coronavirus cases surge in the past week, it was claimed today.

Bradford, Doncaster and Barnsley are said to be at the top of the Government's list of potential Covid-19 hotspots as the virus continues to run rampant in Yorkshire.

Former Government scientific adviser 'Professor Lockdown' Neil Ferguson, of Imperial College London, said these towns and cities were 'clearly of concern' and suggested they could be next to roll back the draconian curbs.  

Parts of Kent, the North West of England and more than a dozen London boroughs are also being kept under review after clusters of cases in the last week.  

Professor Ferguson told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme this morning: 'Absolutely, it's inevitable we will [see more lockdowns]. We're relaxing lockdown rules and that means that contacts in the population are going up.

'That's a variable process that will vary from place to place and that means there will be some places where there are too many contacts and we get clusters of transmissions what's critically important is that we detect those early and adopt the measures necessary to locally reduce transmission again.'

On whether Bradford and Doncaster could be next to lock down, Professor Ferguson said: 'Those are areas where, not as high as Leicester, but they have some of the highest number of cases per 100,000 of the population.

'They're clearly of concern. I think there are a set of measures being introduced in those areas to track down transmissions but whether we need more measures will depend on whether we can pull case numbers down.

'A second national wave is an agglomeration of small outbreaks like the Leicester one merged together across the country that's exactly what we want to avoid by snuffing out those small outbreaks when they are just sparks, when we're not seeing a national large increase in case numbers.' 

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The city is setting up a new testing centre in the Humberstone area in the east of the city, where cases are spiking, in a bid to try and get on top of the outbreak.

The Chief Constable of Leicestershire Police, Simon Cole, told the Press Association: 'The challenges is there's a major public health crisis here in Leicester.

'We've had twice as many cases in the last week here in Leicester than the whole of London has had so clearly for policing we need to work with partners, we need to work with local communities and between us we need to get that infection rate of Covid down all across Leicester and Leicestershire.'

Asked if the data suggested that there were particular areas of Leicester that needed more policing than others, Mr Cole said: 'We're trying to make sure we've got a presence all across the area because this is about where people live, it's about where people work, and it's perhaps about where people have been gathering so we need to be in all those kind of places. 

'We need to make sure, with our public health colleagues that the message reaches people in all those different communities across the city and parts of the county too.'

Police have pledged to stop and fine drivers trying to flee the city after it was put under a fresh lockdown following a spike in Covid-19 cases in the city. 

Officers will carry out spot checks on vehicles leaving locked-down Leicester and could turn them around if their journey is not essential, it was revealed today, as confusion reigned because some areas in the city limits are in lockdown while neighbours are not.

Leicestershire Police is also threatening £100 fines amid growing concerns that residents may flee for the county's open pubs, hair salons or other attractions while patrols will also break up mass gatherings in the city after they were partially blamed for a spike in coronavirus cases in June.     

Leicester City Council and Public Health England issued a map on Tuesday detailing exactly which areas in Leicestershire will be subject to the lockdown, with the boundary extending to Birstall to the north of the city and Wigston to the south.

But those living on a street in Scraptoft last night said they were 'totally confused' by the Government's lockdown boundary, as it leaves half the road under strict lockdown and others free to enjoy the nationwide easing of restrictions on July 4.  

Kathleen McDonagh, 77, who lives a few metres inside Leicester's lockdown border with her daughter Mary, 56, faces a wait of at least two weeks before she can enjoy relaxed Covid-19 measures and be able to head to the pub, hair salons and restaurants.

The pair will also have to wait before they can visit with their children and grandchildren, enjoy a cup of tea at The White Horse, or attend mass at the nearby St Joseph's Catholic Church.

Pictured: The lockdown zone in Leicester, which has left some Britons in lockdown while their neighbours are not

Pictured: Where the border cuts across Leicester on Bowhill Grove, after Matt Hancock announced a local extension of lockdown

Pictured: Where the border cuts across Leicester on Bowhill Grove, after Matt Hancock announced a local extension of lockdown

ROW OVER LOCATIONS OF THE COVID-19 CASES IN ENGLAND 

The true locations of new coronavirus cases have stirred up a row over the data being shared by the Government.

Financial Times investigation today revealed that the way the Government's data is being published means tens of thousands of positive coronavirus tests cannot be located on a map.

This is because Pillar 2 tests — done by private contractors in drive-through centres, mobile testing centres and at-home swabs — are not all broken down into local authority data.

As a result, although the official website confirms there have been 312,654 cases of the coronavirus confirmed in the UK so far, they are not all accounted for. 

The nation-by-nation breakdown lists only 197,032, missing off 37 per cent of them for which the location is not published.

When it was announced that a local lockdown was being considered in Leicester, public data showed only 77 cases of Covid-19 had been diagnosed between June 13 and June 26.

But the Department of Health has since revealed that there are, in reality, more than 944 cases that have appeared in the past fortnight.

The reason for the stark difference is that the Government is not disclosing cases found through 'Pillar 2' testing, which is swab tests done on members of the public.     

Even councils — tasked with protecting their citizens from local flare-ups of Covid-19 — claim they do not have easy access to the data.

Boris Johnson was today accused of letting coronavirus run wild in Leicester during a 'lost week'. 

In brutal clashes at PMQs, Mr Johnson furiously denied failing to share crucial data on infections with the authorities in the city.

But Labour leader Keir Starmer accused him of being 'slow to act' and said local officials were left believing there were only 80 positive tests per week, when the real figure was more than 940.

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Meanwhile, Veronica Cayless, 77, who lives in a house opposite the McDonaghs, is excited to restart her life alongside most Britons on what has been dubbed 'Super Saturday'.   

Her home falls outside the extended lockdown boundary, which was announced on Monday amid a spike in Covid-19 cases in Leicester. The city accounted for around 10 per cent of all positive cases in Britain over the past week.

Almost 400 people have now died in Leicester's hospitals with Covid-19, the Mercury reports, after a further seven victims were confirmed today at University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust.

There have been a total 399 fatalities caused by the virus, not including people who have died in care homes or personal houses. 

The Midlands has been the second worst affected region in England, with 5,733 hospital deaths - fewer than the 6,099 registered in London but more than 4,694 in the North West.

The most people died on April 2 and April 6, when there were 12 and 11 deaths, respectively at the UHL hospitals. The timings coincide with the national peak of the outbreak, which came on April 8.

In light of the new lockdown in the city, bosses at the University Hospitals and Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust said in a joint statement: 'Services are not under significant pressure at the moment but we are well prepared for any increases in people needing hospital treatment or monitoring in the community.

'NHS partners in Leicester have been working closely with Leicester City Council and Public Health England in response to the increased number of people testing positive for coronavirus in the community.' 

The true locations of new coronavirus cases have stirred up a row over the data being shared by the Government.

Financial Times investigation today revealed that the way the Government's data is being published means tens of thousands of positive coronavirus tests cannot be located on a map.

This is because Pillar 2 tests — done by private contractors in drive-through centres, mobile testing centres and at-home swabs — are not all broken down into local authority data.

As a result, although the official website confirms there have been 312,654 cases of the coronavirus confirmed in the UK so far, they are not all accounted for. 

The nation-by-nation breakdown lists only 197,032, missing off 37 per cent of them for which the location is not published.

When it was announced that a local lockdown was being considered in Leicester, public data showed only 77 cases of Covid-19 had been diagnosed between June 13 and June 26.

But the Department of Health has since revealed that there are, in reality, more than 944 cases that have appeared in the past fortnight.

The reason for the stark difference is that the Government is not disclosing cases found through 'Pillar 2' testing, which is swab tests done on members of the public.     

Even councils — tasked with protecting their citizens from local flare-ups of Covid-19 — claim they do not have easy access to the data.

A Written Parliamentary Question, for which the answer was posted on Twitter by Labour Shadow Health Minister, Justin Madders, revealed that Deloitte — a private company running public testing centres — is not required to share its data locally.

The Government's answer said: 'The contract with Deloitte does not require the company to report positive cases to Public Health England and local authorities.'

Officials in Leicester were furious that they had not been given detailed data by the Government until the early hours of Monday morning, when lockdown rumours were rife.

Police check cars in York on March 26. Officers will perform similar checks to ensure locals are obeying the new locdkown in Leicester

Police check cars in York on March 26. Officers will perform similar checks to ensure locals are obeying the new locdkown in Leicester

Kathleen McDonagh, 77, who lives inside the border in Scraptoft with her daughter Mary (seen together), 56, faces a wait of at least two weeks before she can enjoy relaxed lockdown measures and be able to head to the pub, hair salons, restaurants alongside the rest of Britain

Kathleen McDonagh, 77, who lives inside the border in Scraptoft with her daughter Mary (seen together), 56, faces a wait of at least two weeks before she can enjoy relaxed lockdown measures and be able to head to the pub, hair salons, restaurants alongside the rest of Britain

Testing efforts have been scaled up in Leicester so local officials can get on top of the outbreak, with military personnel drafted in to staff temporary test sites (Pictured: A centre at Levington Leisure Centre in the city)

Testing efforts have been scaled up in Leicester so local officials can get on top of the outbreak, with military personnel drafted in to staff temporary test sites (Pictured: A centre at Levington Leisure Centre in the city)

There are now five coronavirus testing centres in Leicester and citizens have been urged to stay at home and return to lockdown measures to stop the spread of the virus (Pictured: A testing facility at a leisure centre)

There are now five coronavirus testing centres in Leicester and citizens have been urged to stay at home and return to lockdown measures to stop the spread of the virus (Pictured: A testing facility at a leisure centre)

Official testing data showed a rise of just 77 cases of Covid-19 between June 13 and June 26, when the news of the looming local lockdown first broke, but the Department of Health has since confirmed there were actually 944 but not all the data was published

Official testing data showed a rise of just 77 cases of Covid-19 between June 13 and June 26, when the news of the looming local lockdown first broke, but the Department of Health has since confirmed there were actually 944 but not all the data was published

WHICH AREAS HAVE THE HIGHEST COVID-19 INFECTION RATES? 

  1. Leicester (140.2 cases per 100,000 people)
  2. Bradford (69.4)
  3. Barnsley (54.7)
  4. Rochdale (53.6)
  5. Bedford (42)
  6. Oldham (38.6)
  7. Rotherham (33.6)
  8. Tameside (33.3)
  9. Blackburn with Darwen (32.9)
  10. Kirklees (30.3)

Source: Public Health England data for June 15 to June 21

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WHICH AREAS HAVE THE LOWEST COVID-19 INFECTION RATES? 

  1. City of London (0 cases per 100,000 people)
  2. South Tyneside (0)
  3. West Berkshire (0)
  4. South Gloucestershire (0.4)
  5. Gloucestershire (0.6)
  6. Wokingham (0.6)
  7. Torbay (0.7)
  8. Redcar and Cleveland (0.7)
  9. Cornwall and Isles of Scilly (0.7)
  10. Portsmouth (0.9)

Source: Public Health England data for June 15 to June 21

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Sir Peter Soulsby, mayor of the city, said on Monday: 'We've had considerable difficulty in getting the data out of the Government until very recently and we're only now getting the opportunity to analyse them properly.' 

Public health director for Leicester, Ivan Browne, told BBC Radio 4: 'Information has been challenging all the way through this. 

'So what we now have, as of the end of last week, is we now have postcode data that allows us to map in that kind of level... we do know where we're seeing the positive cases which helps us to map it and therefore to take action in the appropriate areas.' 

POLICE SAY THEY WILL STOP DRIVERS LEAVING LEICESTER AND FLOUTERS WILL FACE £100 FINES

Police have pledged to stop and fine drivers trying to flee Leicester for drinking or shopping after the city was put under a fresh lockdown following a spike in Covid-19 cases in the city.

Officers will carry out spot checks on vehicles leaving locked-down Leicester and could turn them around if their journey is not essential, it was revealed today, as confusion reigned because some areas in the city limits are in lockdown while neighbours are not.

Leicestershire Police is also threatening £100 fines amid growing concerns that residents may flee for the county's open pubs, hair salons or other attractions while patrols will also break up mass gatherings in the city after they were partially blamed for a spike in coronavirus cases in June.

It came as the NHS set up another temporary coronavirus testing centre in the north east of Leicester – the epicentre of the city's Covid-19 outbreak - taking the total to five in the city.

Yesterday Leicester City fan Colin Browning tweeted a callout for people to join him on a coach to Nottingham for a night in the pub for £15 including space on a 48-seater bus including 'free hand sanitiser, masks and gloves'. It sold out on Tuesday but he reduced it to a minibus last night after admitting he had 'gone over the top'.

It came after people booked minibuses and coaches to ferry them up to nearby Nottingham and Derby to drink on 'Super Saturday' this weekend - when the rest of England emerges from lockdown on July 4. Nottinghamshire's chief constable Craig Guildford says his officers are also ready to act if Leicester residents turn up for 'shopping or a night out' in Nottingham while British Transport Police will be checking those using trains between the two cities.

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Health Minister for the Government, Nadine Dorries, said local authorities had been able to access the data with an 'authentication code' since June 22.

But she added in a tweet: 'It isn't publicly available yet, but that will hopefully change soon.' 

There are now growing concerns that the Government is still not sharing the full picture of local outbreaks, leaving councils under-prepared.

Dr Clive Peedell, a cancer doctor working in the NHS in Yorkshire, said on Twitter: 'We have another Tory Government scandal on our hands. 

'Failure to publish Pillar 2 results (public test results) is truly shocking. Covering up what is happening is about as dangerous and stupid as it gets. A public inquiry is urgently needed.'

Liz Kendall, Labour MP for Leicester West, said: 'Pillar 1 is tests in hospitals. This is published. Pillar 2 is tests from drive through centres and home testing kits done by commercial labs. This is not made public. Leicester was only given this data very late in the day.

'According to [Financial Times] a PHE source says decision not to publish this crucial data was made by Ministers. 

'We urgently need to know whether this is the case and ensure in future, all data is fully shared. [Because] whats happening in Leicester could be happening elsewhere.'

Claudia Webbe, the MP for Leicester East, said the Government was 'drip-feeding' the truth to the city and that there had been 'delays & inefficient testing data'.

But she agreed: 'The reality is clear the rate of infection is high,' and backed the decision to put the city back in lockdown.

Dr Rosena Allin-Khan, MP for Tooting in London, said the incomplete data being given to councils 'leaves them unable to analyse infection rates'.

Professor Kate Ardern, director of public health at Wigan Council told the Financial Times: 'If I don't know who is being tested, and getting positive tests, in the community because one of the major elements of the testing system isn't currently sending me complete and reliable intelligence... it actually hampers our ability to get ahead of the curve on outbreak management.'

Ian Hudspeth, a chairman at the Local Government Association, which represents councils around the UK, said: 'It is clear that more precise, granular information is needed in order to help councils track down and isolate any specific outbreaks or clusters. 

COVID-19 OUTBREAK IN LEICESTER WALKERS CRISPS FACTORY 

Walkers today confirmed there have been 28 positive cases of Covid-19 at its crisp factory in Leicester.

The firm, which employs 1,400 people across the site in the Beaumont Leys area of the city, said it had seen a 'steady increase' in the number of confirmed cases during June.

Walkers claimed its track and trace procedure indicated the transmission of the virus was 'not in our factory'.

The company claims the rise 'coincides with the roll-out and uptake of testing' in Leicester.

The firm, which employs 1,400 people across the site in the Beaumont Leys area of the city, said it had seen a 'steady increase' in the number of confirmed cases during June

The firm, which employs 1,400 people across the site in the Beaumont Leys area of the city, said it had seen a 'steady increase' in the number of confirmed cases during June

A spokesperson said: 'The safety of our team and their families is our number one priority and we continue to maintain the highest level of vigilance to help prevent the spread of the virus and to protect our people.

'We have seen an increase in the number of confirmed cases, reflecting the situation in the local community and coinciding with the roll-out and uptake of testing.

'We are in regular contact with the local health authorities and government bodies and are reassured that we have all the correct measures in place to protect our employees.'

The company added employees with a confirmed or suspected case of Covid-19 were self-isolating on full pay. 

A number of other food processing plants in Leicester have had confirmed cases of the infection, including Samworth Brothers and Pladis, which makes biscuits for McVities.

Scientists say food processing plants may be ideal locations for the virus to spread because they are cold - meaning the virus can survive for longer and people's airways are more susceptible to infection - and people work close together.

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'This data needs to be provided promptly and shared quickly, with both district councils and upper tier local authorities, to ensure the swiftest and most effective response.'

He said it was vital that responses are 'proportionate' and the public understand why they are happening - and that police-enforced lockdowns should be a 'last resort'. 

Despite the row over data, Prime Minister Boris Johnson today denied that the Government had kept it secret from local councils, insisting in Prime Minister's Questions that it was shared.

His opponent, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, accused the PM of letting coronavirus run wild in Leicester during a 'lost week'.   

In the Commons, Sir Keir said: 'At the daily press conference on June 18 the Health Secretary said ''there's an outbreak of Covid-19 right now in parts of Leicester''. 

'Yet it was only on Monday evening this week that the Government introduced restrictions. That's a delay of 11 days during which the virus was spreading in Leicester. Why was the Government so slow to act?'

Mr Johnson said the Government 'acted decisively' and 'put on the brakes' in Leicester.

'Actually the Government first took notice and acted that was going on in Leicester on June 8 because we could see there was an issue there,' he said. 'We sent mobile testing units shortly thereafter.

'We engaged actively with the authorities in Leicester, with public health in Leicester, with everyone responsible in Leicester, in the way we have done with other areas that have had similar issues.

'Unfortunately in Leicester, it did not prove possible to get the results that we have seen elsewhere so on Monday we took the decision, which I hope the right honourable gentleman approves of, to go into lockdown in Leicester.'

Jess Phillips, Labour MP for Birmingham Yardley and shadow minister for domestic violence, tweeted: 'Boris Johnson is just lying. It has been incredibly hard for local authorities to get data and information from the beginning of the crisis.' 

The crisps company Walkers today confirmed there have been 28 positive cases of Covid-19 at its crisp factory in Leicester.

The firm, which employs 1,400 people across the site in the Beaumont Leys area of the city, said it had seen a 'steady increase' in the number of confirmed cases during June.

Boris Johnson
Keir Starmer

Labour leader Keir Starmer (right) accused Boris Johnson (left) of being 'slow to act' and said local officials in Leicester were left believing there were only 80 positive tests per week, when the real figure was more than 940

LEICESTER HOSPITAL DEATH TOLL NEARS 400 

 Almost 400 people have now died in Leicester's hospitals with Covid-19, the Mercury reports, after a further seven victims were confirmed today at University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust.

There have been a total 399 fatalities caused by the virus, not including people who have died in care homes or personal houses. 

The Midlands has been the second worst affected region in England, with 5,733 hospital deaths - fewer than the 6,099 registered in London but more than 4,694 in the North West.

The most people died on April 2 and April 6, when there were 12 and 11 deaths, respectively at the UHL hospitals. The timings coincide with the national peak of the outbreak, which came on April 8.

In light of the new lockdown in the city, bosses at the University Hospitals and Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust said in a joint statement: 'Services are not under significant pressure at the moment but we are well prepared for any increases in people needing hospital treatment or monitoring in the community.

'NHS partners in Leicester have been working closely with Leicester City Council and Public Health England in response to the increased number of people testing positive for coronavirus in the community.'

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Walkers claimed its track and trace procedure indicated the transmission of the virus was 'not in our factory'.

The company claims the rise 'coincides with the roll-out and uptake of testing' in Leicester.

This comes after Leicester became the first UK city to be plunged back into lockdown on Monday night, after 944 new cases were identified in the last two weeks.  

A spokesperson said: 'The safety of our team and their families is our number one priority and we continue to maintain the highest level of vigilance to help prevent the spread of the virus and to protect our people.

'We have seen an increase in the number of confirmed cases, reflecting the situation in the local community and coinciding with the roll-out and uptake of testing.

'We are in regular contact with the local health authorities and government bodies and are reassured that we have all the correct measures in place to protect our employees.'

The company added employees with a confirmed or suspected case of Covid-19 were self-isolating on full pay. 

A number of other food processing plants in Leicester have had confirmed cases of the infection, including Samworth Brothers and Pladis, which makes biscuits for McVities.

Scientists say food processing plants may be ideal locations for the virus to spread because they are cold - meaning the virus can survive for longer and people's airways are more susceptible to infection - and people work close together.

WHICH AREAS HAVE THE HIGHEST CORONAVIRUS INFECTION RATES IN ENGLAND? (Public Health England data from June 15 to June 21)
Area name Covid-19 cases
per 100k people
Area name Covid-19 cases
per 100k people
Leicester 140.2 Newcastle upon Tyne 5.3
Bradford 69.4 Brighton and Hove 5.2
Barnsley 54.7 Brent 5.1
Rochdale 53.6 County Durham 5.1
Bedford 42 Oxfordshire 5.1
Oldham 38.6 Westminster 5.1
Rotherham 33.6 Cambridgeshire 5.1
Tameside 33.3 North Tyneside 4.9
Blackburn with Darwen 32.9 Darlington 4.7
Kirklees 30.3 North Lincolnshire 4.7
Peterborough 27.9 Solihull 4.7
Luton 26.6 Somerset 4.7
Derby 24.5 Hertfordshire 4.6
Kingston upon Hull, City of 22.6 Walsall 4.6
Manchester 21.6 Bexley 4.5
Southend-on-Sea 20.8 Merton 4.4
Leicestershire 20.8 Norfolk 4.3
Sheffield 20.6 Hartlepool 4.3
Leeds 19.8 Bracknell Forest 4.1
Wirral 19.2 Ealing 4.1
Wakefield 18.6 Dudley 3.7
Stoke-on-Trent 18 Surrey 3.7
Doncaster 17.4 Redbridge 3.6
Cheshire East 16 Southwark 3.5
Central Bedfordshire 15.9 Gateshead 3.5
Bolton 15.8 Northumberland 3.4
Lancashire 15 Newham 3.4
Northamptonshire 14.9 West Sussex 3.3
Stockton-on-Tees 14.7 Greenwich 3.1
East Riding of Yorkshire 14.1 Islington 2.9
North Yorkshire 13.8 Isle of Wight 2.8
Shropshire 13.7 Tower Hamlets 2.8
Kent 13.5 Wandsworth 2.8
Slough 13.4 Enfield 2.7
Bury 13.2 Hillingdon 2.6
Nottinghamshire 12.6 Haringey 2.6
Calderdale 12.4 Rutland 2.5
Stockport 12.3 Hackney 2.5
Cheshire West and Chester 12.3 Barnet 2.3
Thurrock 12.2 Bromley 2.1
Milton Keynes 10.8 Herefordshire, County of 2.1
Blackpool 10.8 Windsor and Maidenhead 2
Nottingham 10.6 Lewisham 2
Swindon 10.4 Sutton 2
Warwickshire 10.3 Bristol, City of 1.9
Salford 10.2 Havering 1.9
Trafford 10.2 Camden 1.9
Wolverhampton 9.9 North East Lincolnshire 1.9
Derbyshire 9.7 Reading 1.8
Birmingham 9.6 Sunderland 1.8
Staffordshire 9.4 Harrow 1.6
Warrington 9.1 Croydon 1.6
East Sussex 9 Plymouth 1.5
Telford and Wrekin 8.4 Suffolk 1.5
Sefton 8.4 Barking and Dagenham 1.4
Middlesbrough 7.8 North Somerset 1.4
Kensington and Chelsea 7.7 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole 1.3
Hounslow 7.4 Hampshire 1.2
Sandwell 7.3 Wiltshire 1.2
York 6.7 Kingston upon Thames 1.1
St. Helens 6.7 Dorset 1.1
Liverpool 6.3 Bath and North East Somerset 1
Halton 6.2 Richmond upon Thames 1
Medway 6.1 Devon 1
Buckinghamshire 6.1 Portsmouth 0.9
Knowsley 6 Lambeth 0.9
Hammersmith and Fulham 5.9 Torbay 0.7
Essex 5.8 Redcar and Cleveland 0.7
Cumbria 5.8 Cornwall and Isles of Scilly 0.7
Worcestershire 5.7 Gloucestershire 0.6
Coventry 5.7 Wokingham 0.6
Lincolnshire 5.7 South Gloucestershire 0.4
Southampton 5.5 City of London 0
Wigan 5.5 South Tyneside 0
Waltham Forest 5.4 West Berkshire 0

WHICH AREAS OF LONDON HAVE THE HIGHEST INFECTION RATES? 

London, once the epicentre of Britain's coronavirus outbreak, now has some of the lowest infection rates in the country, according to Public Health England data.

Kensington & Chelsea, a rich area in the west of the capital, now has the highest infection rate with 7.7 cases per 100,000 people, according to data from June 15-21.

This is the highest in London but pales in comparison to the rate of infection in England's new hotspot - Leicester - where there are 140 cases per 100,000. 

Next after Kensington is Hounslow, with 7.4 cases per 100,000, and Hammersmith and Fulham with 5.9 - all are in the west end of the city.

The others in the top 10 are Waltham Forest (5.4), Brent (5.1), Westminster (5.1), Bexley (4.5), Merton (4.4), Ealing (4.1) and Redbridge (3.6).

At the other end of the scale, areas with two or fewer cases per 100,000 people include Lewisham, Sutton, Havering, Camden, Harrow, Croydon, Barking & Dagenham, Kingston, Richmond, Lambeth, and the City of London where there have been 0 cases per 100,000. 

HOW DO COVID-19 INFECTION RATES VARY ACROSS LONDON? (PUBLIC HEALTH ENGLAND DATA) 
Borough Covid-19 cases
per 100,000
Borough Covid-19 cases
 per 100,000
Borough Covid-19 cases
per 100,000
Kensington and Chelsea 7.7 Newham 3.4 Lewisham 2
Hounslow 7.4 Greenwich 3.1 Sutton 2
Hammersmith and Fulham 5.9 Islington 2.9 Havering 1.9
Waltham Forest 5.4 Tower Hamlets 2.8 Camden 1.9
Brent 5.1 Wandsworth 2.8 Harrow 1.6
Westminster 5.1 Enfield 2.7 Croydon 1.6
Bexley 4.5 Hillingdon 2.6 Barking and Dagenham 1.4
Merton 4.4 Haringey 2.6 Kingston upon Thames 1.1
Ealing 4.1 Hackney 2.5 Richmond upon Thames 1
Redbridge 3.6 Barnet 2.3 Lambeth 0.9
Southwark 3.5 Bromley 2.1 City of London 0

 

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More local lockdowns are 'just DAYS away' PHE sources claim, as experts warn Bradford and Doncaster could be next to be hit by restrictions after Leicester 

Leicester-style localised lockdowns are 'just days away' from being imposed after dozens of towns and cities saw coronavirus cases surge in the past week, it was claimed today.

Bradford, Doncaster and Barnsley are said to be at the top of the Government's list of potential Covid-19 hotspots as the virus continues to run rampant in Yorkshire.

Former Government scientific adviser 'Professor Lockdown' Neil Ferguson, of Imperial College London, said these towns and cities were 'clearly of concern' and suggested they could be next to roll back the draconian curbs.  

Parts of Kent, the North West of England and more than a dozen London boroughs are also being kept under review after clusters of cases in the last week.  

Public Health England and Department of Health sources told Sky News they had earmarked 36 Covid hotspots in England where lockdowns could be 'just days away'. 

But the Government is yet to officially confirm which areas are most at risk of outbreaks. And the full extent of local infection rates is also still unclear because of a huge gap in the data given out to the public and what is known inside Number 10.

The Government does not disclose coronavirus cases found through 'Pillar 2' testing, which is swab tests done on members of the public. Only the results of hospital patients and healthcare staff tested for the virus are being made public, despite accounting for just a fraction of overall cases. 

For comparison, Leicester officially recorded just 80 new positive tests between June 13 and June 26, according to the Government's official testing data. But health secretary Matt Hancock revealed that there were in fact 944 diagnoses made during that time, when Pillar 2 testing was included. 

Local councils and public health officials say they aren't being given proper testing data and are now battling with the Government to find out what's happening in their areas.  

Peter Soulsby, mayor of Leicester, said he had tried 'for weeks' to prise testing results from the Government, which delayed the city's lockdown. But Boris Johnson refuted these claims in the House of Commons today, claiming ministers had been forthcoming with swabbing data for all local authorities in England.

Public Health England data shows Leicester's infection rate is twice as high as the second-worst-hit city of Bradford

Public Health England data shows Leicester's infection rate is twice as high as the second-worst-hit city of Bradford

Former Government scientific adviser Professor Neil Ferguson, of Imperial College London, said Bradford and Doncaster were 'clearly of concern' because the Yorkshire cities have some of the highest numbers of cases per capita in the country

Former Government scientific adviser Professor Neil Ferguson, of Imperial College London, said Bradford and Doncaster were 'clearly of concern' because the Yorkshire cities have some of the highest numbers of cases per capita in the country

Professor Ferguson told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme this morning: 'Absolutely, it's inevitable we will [see more lockdowns]. We're relaxing lockdown rules and that means that contacts in the population are going up. 

'That's a variable process that will vary from place to place and that means there will be some places where there are too many contacts and we get clusters of transmissions what's critically important is that we detect those early and adopt the measures necessary to locally reduce transmission again.'

On whether Bradford and Doncaster could be next to lock down, Professor Ferguson said: 'Those are areas where, not as high as Leicester, but they have some of the highest number of cases per 100,000 of the population. 

'They're clearly of concern. I think there are a set of measures being introduced in those areas to track down transmissions but whether we need more measures will depend on whether we can pull case numbers down.

'A second national wave is an agglomeration of small outbreaks like the Leicester one merged together across the country that's exactly what we want to avoid by snuffing out those small outbreaks when they are just sparks, when we're not seeing a national large increase in case numbers.' 

Professor Ferguson said the UK was too slow to ramp up testing, which left the country playing catch up with the epidemic. 

Data compiled by Public Health England (PHE) shows Havering and Wiltshire have seen the biggest week-on-week increases in confirmed Covid-19 infections (300 per cent). In comparison, Leicester has recorded a 5 per cent jump in cases ¿ going from 39 cases registered between June 13-19 to 41 in the following seven-day spell

Data compiled by Public Health England (PHE) shows Havering and Wiltshire have seen the biggest week-on-week increases in confirmed Covid-19 infections (300 per cent). In comparison, Leicester has recorded a 5 per cent jump in cases – going from 39 cases registered between June 13-19 to 41 in the following seven-day spell

Pictured: The lockdown zone in Leicester, which has left some Britons in lockdown while their neighbours are not

He added: ' I think without doubt we didn't ramp up testing fast enough and therefore we were relatively blind in late February, early March about truly how much infection was happening in the community in this country brought in from Spain and Italy and other countries. 

'It was only once we started hospital surveillance we got a good handle on that and from that point onwards we acted very quickly, it was just a little too late.

The 36 'at-risk' areas in England

  • Havering 
  • Wiltshire 
  • Wandsworth 
  • Gloucestershire 
  • Ealing 
  • Hammersmith and Fulham 
  • Doncaster 
  • Plymouth
  • Barking and Dagenham 
  • Westminster 
  • Milton Keynes 
  • Wakefield 
  • Haringey 
  • Medway 
  • Hounslow 
  • Brent 
  • Harrow 
  • Kensington and Chelsea 
  • Slough
  • Suffolk 
  • Redbridge 
  • Sandwell 
  • Enfield 
  • Tower Hamlets 
  • York 
  • Sunderland 
  • Wigan 
  • Windsor and Maidenhead 
  • Leicester 
  • Gateshead 
  • Isle of Wight 
  • Richmond upon Thames
  • Portsmouth 
  • Redcar and Cleveland 
  • Derbyshire 
  • Walsall 

In Scotland,  Lanarkshire and Dumfries & Galloway are also experiencing a surge in cases.

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'We were one of the most heavily seeded countries with infection in Europe, while we introduced lockdown measures around the same time as European countries, a little later than some, the epidemic was more progressed.

'Per 100,000 of the population yes we're one of the worst affected European countries. I would say before we make international comparisons, just bear in mind that we're still very early into this pandemic.

'Lessons can be learned from what happened in the UK up till now but I would prefer to focus on the next six months right before looking back in earnest.' 

Other scientists and public health officials have warned of more localised lockdowns after it emerged parts of Kent, London and Scotland are still experiencing clusters of the virus. 

Professor Deenan Pillay, a virologist at Universtiy College London, told the Guardian: 'I am expecting there to be a number of Leicesters. The base level of infections going on in the UK is still much higher than it was in other countries in Europe when they started to release their lockdowns,' he added.

Jeanelle de Gruchy, president of the Association of Directors of Public Health, told the newspaper: 'We need to be cautious on easing lockdown because we are not out of the woods yet. Leicester is a sobering example of that. It should make us cautious about being too gung-ho in easing different measures.'  

Infections have risen in the Medway, the West London boroughs of Hammersmith and Fulham and Ealing, and Lanarkshire and Dumfries & Galloway in Scotland. 

Figures show these areas experienced an increase of 10 or more weekly infections between June 18 and June 25 - but this is likely to account for just a fraction of overall cases because the Government does not make Pillar 1 testing data available. 

For example, government data shows the UK has officially recorded 311,965 Covid-19 cases since the crisis began to spiral out of control in February.

But PHE has only revealed the area-by-area data for 63 per cent of the infections – meaning the location of 115,000 confirmed cases is missing.  

The massive disparity in figures is seen clearly in Leicester. Leicester City Council (LCC) claims there has been 3,216 laboratory-confirmed coronavirus cases across the city since Britain's outbreak began to spiral out of control in February.

Local officials revealed 944 of those Covid-19 infections were diagnosed in the past fortnight — meaning the city's epidemic has grown by roughly 70.6 per cent since mid-June. This equates to roughly 977 coronavirus cases for every 100,000 people.

But that data given to the LCC, which takes into account the results of all tests carried out across NHS, Public Health England and commercial laboratories, is not available to the public.

Data shows how Leicester's coronavirus outbreak has grown over time. The numbers compiled for England only include pillar one swab tests, which officials say are only given to patients with a medical need or key workers

Data shows how Leicester's coronavirus outbreak has grown over time. The numbers compiled for England only include pillar one swab tests, which officials say are only given to patients with a medical need or key workers

Government-released data shows Leicester has only recorded 1,056 cases of the coronavirus since the pandemic began — a third of the figure obtained by LCC. It revealed only 366 new infections have been confirmed in May and June.

Data on the results of pillar one tests analysed by The Daily Telegraph shows Leicester last week recorded the second-highest amount of cases across England – behind only Kent (101).

However, the rate in Kent – the upper tier local authority with the most diagnosed cases (5,591) – has dropped 16 per cent week-on-week.

Nine of the 36 authorities where Covid-19 cases are rising, including Sunderland, Portsmouth and York, recorded no new cases between June 13 and 19.

How a large BAME population, poverty and crowded households may have contributed to Leicester's spike in cases 

Government officials, local politicians and scientists are divided over whether Leicester is experiencing a real surge in cases or whether better testing is simply finding more of them where it wasn't before.

It is also not clear whether there are any characteristics of Leicester which make it more likely to see a surge in cases, or if random chance has meant the first 'second wave' is happening there. Experts say many of the risk factors in Leicester are the same in all major cities in England.

The mayor of the city, Sir Peter Soulsby, said on BBC Radio 4 this morning that a report sent to him by the Government 'actually acknowledges that it's very likely that the increase in number of positives identified is a result of increased testing, and that actually there's perhaps nothing of any great significance in those results.'

Director of Public Health for the city, Ivan Browne, said: 'Interestingly it [the surge in cases] is very much around the younger, working age population and predominantly towards the east part of our city. We started to see this level through our testing programme.

'Young people work in many industries across the city so at this stage what we're trying to do is gather as much epidemiological information as we can to really try and get underneath and have an understanding. I don't think at the moment that we are seeing a single source or a single smoking gun on this'.

It was always likely that surges in cases would be seen in cities first. There are more people, raising the risk, and those people are more likely to live in densely populated areas and come into contact with strangers on a regular basis.

Dr Shaun Fitzgerald, from the University of Cambridge, said: 'There will be differences in the ease with which people can maintain physical distance between densely populated areas and rural environments – so it isn't surprising to me that we may see localised flare-ups, which in turn may need suppressing through delayed easing or temporary re-introduction of some constraints on some movements and activities.' 

Leicester also has high levels of deprivation, which affects people's lives in ways that put them at risk of catching the virus. 

Dr Simon Clarke, a microbiologist at the University of Reading, told MailOnline: 'In deprived areas people are more likely to have to go to work, less likely to be able to work from home, and more likely to use public transport. They can't distance themselves from others.'

The Samworth Brothers sandwich factory in the city reported over the weekend that it had diagnosed cases of Covid-19 among its staff.

Food processing factories are a higher transmission risk because cold environments allow the virus to survive for longer on hard surfaces and make people's airways more susceptible to infection.

Dr Clarke added that the types of work people do may increase their risk.  

'Blue collar cities are now at higher risk than places like London and Manchester which have more financial services,' he added. 

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They all recorded either one or two cases the following week, hence why they were included in the list of areas where outbreaks appear to be growing.

Doncaster – a town in South Yorkshire – recorded the biggest actual spike in coronavirus cases over the two-week period, going from 11 to 32.

The London boroughs of Hammersmith and Fulham (seven to 18) and Ealing (five to 14) also witnessed big jumps in the actual numbers of cases.

Thirteen other London boroughs are also experiencing a rise in coronavirus cases, according to the analysis of the figures by The Telegraph.

Official figures do show the number of infections are dropping, however. The average number of lab-confirmed cases has dropped to 894 – the lowest since March.

It emerged today that one in seven children have tested positive for the virus in Leicester, according to The Telegraph.

Prevalence is now thought to be 15 per cent among under-18s in the East Midlands city - almost three times higher than the rest of England. 

A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Social Care said: 'We have been working closely with our local partners, providing them with the resources and tools so that they can take swift action to deal with any new local spikes in infections.' 

Government officials, local politicians and scientists are divided over whether Leicester is experiencing a real surge in cases or whether better testing is simply finding more of them where it wasn't before.

It is also not clear whether there are any characteristics of Leicester which make it more likely to see a surge in cases, or if random chance has meant the first 'second wave' is happening there. Experts say many of the risk factors in Leicester are the same in all major cities in England.

The mayor of the city, Sir Peter Soulsby, said on BBC Radio 4 this week that a report sent to him by the Government 'actually acknowledges that it's very likely that the increase in number of positives identified is a result of increased testing, and that actually there's perhaps nothing of any great significance in those results.'

Director of Public Health for the city, Ivan Browne, said: 'Interestingly it [the surge in cases] is very much around the younger, working age population and predominantly towards the east part of our city. We started to see this level through our testing programme.

'Young people work in many industries across the city so at this stage what we're trying to do is gather as much epidemiological information as we can to really try and get underneath and have an understanding. I don't think at the moment that we are seeing a single source or a single smoking gun on this'.

It was always likely that surges in cases would be seen in cities first. There are more people, raising the risk, and those people are more likely to live in densely populated areas and come into contact with strangers on a regular basis.

Dr Shaun Fitzgerald, from the University of Cambridge, said: 'There will be differences in the ease with which people can maintain physical distance between densely populated areas and rural environments – so it isn't surprising to me that we may see localised flare-ups, which in turn may need suppressing through delayed easing or temporary re-introduction of some constraints on some movements and activities.' 

Leicester also has high levels of deprivation, which affects people's lives in ways that put them at risk of catching the virus. 

Dr Simon Clarke, a microbiologist at the University of Reading, told MailOnline: 'In deprived areas people are more likely to have to go to work, less likely to be able to work from home, and more likely to use public transport. They can't distance themselves from others.'

The Samworth Brothers sandwich factory in the city reported over the weekend that it had diagnosed cases of Covid-19 among its staff.

Food processing factories are a higher transmission risk because cold environments allow the virus to survive for longer on hard surfaces and make people's airways more susceptible to infection.

Dr Clarke added that the types of work people do may increase their risk. 'Blue collar cities are now at higher risk than places like London and Manchester which have more financial services,' he added.