TheChizler wrote: » Bars and restaurants accounted for 27% of cases at their height IIRC, must see if I can find the stat. Think about it, you go for dinner with your friends, you're put sitting next to each other for 90 minutes no mask. Pretty much guaranteed transmission if one person has it.
Cork Lass wrote: » You’re being way too harsh here. The majority of people complied, if not 100% then close enough for it not to matter.
SusieBlue wrote: » Close the pubs/restaurants and they’ll just have dinner/coffee at each other’s houses instead, which is far riskier and a less controlled environment. If lockdown round 2 has shown us anything so far it’s that people won’t forego spending time with family and friends indefinitely. There will be far more people having little dinner parties and coffee mornings if they don’t allow indoor dining, it won’t stop people, it will just make them sneakier and more creative. Transmission will still occur, it will just be in private homes rather than businesses.
cantalach wrote: » Odd that you have such low expectations of people when, within the last page or so, you have thanked posts by people claiming that the vast majority of people have complied with the rules. Is boredom and lockdown fatigue really going to turn all those impeccable saints into rebellious devils?
cantalach wrote: » It’s very convenient to blame the reckless idiots who go to house parties. It’s not so convenient to blame our family member who just gets a bit sloppy sometimes and forgets.
Pen Rua wrote: » The Banks of the River Lee Walk (at the top of North Mall, before going up the hill to Sunday's Well) closes at 6pm in October and (I think) closes at 5pm from November. There's no place near us (Sunday's Well) to take a pleasant walk in the evenings now. During Lockdown 1, we would walk the Banks of the River Lee Walk, then up to the Mardyke Areana, Lee Fields and back. Now, the only have decent route is to go around by the Pres school and back round via Sunday's Well Road. During the height of winter (dark), I'm not keen on walking along Sunday's Well Road... Is there anyone to contact about potentially extending opening hours during Lockdown 2?
Pen Rua wrote: » FWIW, Cllr Des Cahill will be lobbying Eamon Ryan for immediate funding & installation of lighting for The Marina.https://www.echolive.ie/corknews/Temporary-lights-to-be-requested-for-the-Marina-4171fa4b-4503-40db-8053-c1ea6627285c-ds?fbclid=IwAR13i0qhXeGQ2Rr7IgfGrtnIp3djCN1rJRBy8pdXCkFocWi2y_ekRVAr5ss I'm nearly certain I read a similar article on FB this morning suggesting Cllr Cahill will also lobby for lighting in Fitzgerald's Park & other parks/amenities in the city.
Cork Lass wrote: » I actually think you are trolling now, just provoking people for fun or maybe you’re just bored. I’ll continue to blame the reckless idiots as they are the problem and the spreaders of this disease. Not one of my family has had COVID or even been a close contact (because we are complying) so we must be doing something right.
cantalach wrote: » Great that the campaign for lighting only kicks up a gear after the clocks have already gone back.
CorkRed93 wrote: » NCT deemed essential I believe
JackieChang wrote: » But wasn't it put on hold during the last lockdown? People's deadlines were extended by 3 months or so.
Be right back wrote: » 130 in Cork today.
JP Liz V1 wrote: » Weekend backlog? What's our hospitals like currently?
ACitizenErased wrote: » CUH has most in country - 30 with 4 in ICU. Most if not all are not admissions - they caught it in hospital.
JP Liz V1 wrote: » Is the baby ok?
igCorcaigh wrote: » Does anyone know where the testing centres are? I live in the city centre but do not drive. I don't want the testers visiting my grotty apartment!
ACitizenErased wrote: » North Link Business Park & South Douglas road
igCorcaigh wrote: » Perfect, thanks ACE. I can walk to South Douglas road.
TheChizler wrote: » You don't get a choice unfortunately, and there's no obvious way to change location on the system they use. If you can't easily get there the army..