Can we take the Tube, or not? Credit: Isabel Infantes / AFP via Getty

It’s hard not to feel a degree of sympathy for the parliamentary draftsman whose desk the Coronavirus Regulations job landed on. The Explanatory Memorandum to Wednesday’s amending Statutory Instrument naturally offers more by way of obfuscation than explanation. But there, slipped in on page four after some guff about how “these amendments respond to new issues, including around ensuring key services remain open…”, is that a subtle attempt at exculpation?
“The new measures”, the author continues, “also include a number of small relaxations of the restrictions, whilst encouraging continued compliance, aligned with the Prime Minister’s plan, set out on Sunday 10th May”. In other words, “Boris blathered on about sunbathing the other day and Muggins here has had to do his best.”
Because many of the promised changes aren’t changes at all, and others have been left to languish in the “guidance”, unenacted. This time round, having had six weeks to think about it, they’ve really put the sham into the shambles. Indeed, as part of this much-heralded “relaxation” of the lockdown, not only has the cost of a fixed penalty notice nearly doubled but, for reasons I’ll explain, the way the list of reasonable excuses has been altered could have the effect of tightening the restrictions rather than loosening them.
First though, does the new version of the Regulations allow us to meet up with friends and family? Not really. Little more than we could last week, is the truth of it. Regulation 6(2)(b) has been amended to say that we can now be outside our homes if we have a “need” to take exercise with one member of another household. But that’s always been the position. The unaltered Regulation 7 only prohibits gatherings of more than two people of different households. So if last week you and your friend from another household each had a need to take exercise, and arranged to do so at the same time, and in each other’s company, you would have committed no offence.
There has also been a lot of chatter about “getting people back to work” of course. But what changes have been made to the “reasonable excuse” exception that says you can leave home to work, if you can’t work at home? Not a comma.
What about driving long distances? The Government’s 60-page “Our Plan to Rebuild” guidance, released on Monday, informs us that “People may drive to outdoor spaces irrespective of distance”. But there’s nothing about driving in any of the Regulations, amended or unamended. If rural police look askance at your claim to “need” to drive a hundred miles to a National Park you won’t be able to point to any law that corrects them. Boris said so did he, sir? Boris says a lot of things, sir.
Yes, there’s a new provision, at Regulation 6(2)(ba), that says we have a reasonable excuse if we need to (still “need to”, note) “visit a public open space for the purposes of open-air recreation to promote physical or mental health or emotional wellbeing”. So we can now sit down outdoors for longer periods than would have been justifiable as a mere break during exercise. As long as we need to, for recreation, to promote health or “emotional wellbeing”.
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