Harrogate faces bad news on lockdown extension in today's Government briefing
and live on Freeview channel 276
The district has been feeling the pressure of the shutdown since it began in mid-March.
North Yorkshire Police was critical earlier this week of the number of local people in or region carrying on to see people from outside their household.
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Hide AdOfficial figures released yesterday, Wednesday, show that since 2 April, North Yorkshire Police has issued a total of 153 fines to a minority of people who have failed to comply with the restrictions as officers work to protect the NHS and save lives.
As well as Harrogate Hospital itself, care homes remain in the frontline with anxiety about the amount of PPE (personal protective equipment) available.
The latest figures released by NHS England show that the total number of deaths at Harrogate District Hospital as a result of coronavirus has now risen to 25.
The local economy, too, is labouring. Despite a move online by some small businesses into home deliveries, business leaders in the Harrogate district are concerned that more needs to be done to save the local economy and local jobs.
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Hide AdBut, after nearly a month of lockdown which has seen the rapid construction in Harrogate of a NHS Nightingale Hospital to cope with virus patients, those pressures are unlikely to ease any time soon.
Commentators say the coronavirus lockdown will be extended for another three weeks at today's briefing by the Government.
Ministers are meeting this morning to agree to prolong the social distancing controls announced on March 23, amid signs the epidemic in the UK is beginning to peak.
The Cabinet meeting comes after the number of people who have died in hospital after testing positive for Covid-19 reached almost 13,000, with growing concern over increasing deaths in care homes.
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Hide AdDowning Street said the three-week review of the lockdown regulations will go ahead as planned in line with the coronavirus legislation.
However, ministers and officials have repeatedly made clear there is no prospect of any imminent relaxation.
On Wednesday night, health minister Nadine Dorries took to Twitter to urge journalists to stop asking about an exit strategy.
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Hide AdShe said: "There is only one way we can 'exit' full lockdown and that is when we have a vaccine.
"Until then, we need to find ways we can adapt society and strike a balance between the health of the nation and our economy."
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has said the party will back an extension, but has called on ministers to set out an exit strategy explaining how restrictions will eventually be lifted.
Elsewhere, a leaked letter written on Saturday to a senior official at the Department of Health and Social Care by the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (Adass) says mixed messages from Government have created "confusion and additional workload".
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Hide AdThe letter also raises fears about funding, testing, personal protective equipment (PPE) and the shielding scheme for vulnerable people.
Seen by the BBC, it says early drops of PPE have been "paltry" and more recent deliveries have been "haphazard", with some even being confiscated by border control for the NHS.
Speaking at the daily No 10 press conference on Wednesday, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said there could be no "let up" in the efforts to curb the spread of the virus.
Mr Hancock said:"We cannot let go of the hard work that has been done so far. This shared sacrifice is starting to work but we will not lift these measures until it is safe to do so."
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Hide AdForeign Secretary Dominic Raab - standing in for Prime Minister Boris Johnson as he continues to recuperate from the disease - will chair a meeting of the Cabinet today, Thursday.
It is expected that ministers will be briefed on the latest situation by the Government's chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance.
Mr Raab will then lead a meeting of the Cobra civil contingencies committee when it is expected that the extension of the lockdown will be formally approved.
The leaders of the devolved administrations for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will take part by video link.
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Hide AdHowever, even before the meeting, the Stormont executive announced social distancing rules would continue in Northern Ireland at least until May.
According to the latest figures, 12,868 patients have died in hospital after testing positive for coronavirus in the UK as of 5pm on Tuesday, up by 761 from the previous day.
However, England's chief medical officer Professor Chris Whitty warned of a possible "bounce" in the numbers when the next set of figures are released due to delays in reporting deaths over the Easter weekend.
He said while the UK was "probably" reaching the peak of the epidemic, the high numbers of deaths were expected to continue for a "short while" to come.
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Hide AdDespite insisting the restrictions must remain for now, ministers nevertheless are deeply conscious of the economic damage being wrought by the lockdown.
The Office for Budget Responsibility warned earlier this week unemployment could rise by two million, while the UK could be left with the biggest deficit as a proportion of GDP since the Second World War.
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