Destinations Magazine

New Lockdown Rules for Scotland 5th Jan 2021

By Emma @glasgowfoodie

New lockdown rules come into effect at midnight 5th January in Scotland.

Coronavirus (COVID-19): stay at home guidance

By law, in a level 4 area, you can only leave your home (or garden) for an essential purpose.

Although you can leave home for these purposes, you should stay as close to home as possible. Use local shops and services wherever you can.

Examples of reasonable reasons to go out:

– for work or an activity associated with seeking employment, or to provide voluntary or charitable services, but only where that cannot be done from your home.

– for education including, school, college, university or other essential purposes connected with a course of study.

-for essential shopping, including essential shopping for a vulnerable person. You should use online shopping or shops and other services in your immediate area wherever you can.

– to obtain or deposit money, where it is not possible to do so from home.

-for healthcare, including COVID-19 testing and vaccination.

-for childcare or support services for parents or expectant parents.

-for essential services, including services of a charitable or voluntary nature such as food banks, alcohol or drug support services.

-to access public services where it is not possible to do so, including from home services provided to victims (such as victims of crime), social-care services, accessing day care centres,
services provided by the Department for Work and Pensions, services provided to victims (including victims of crime), asylum and immigration services and interviews, waste or recycling services,
to provide care, assistance, support to or respite for a vulnerable person.

-to provide or receive emergency assistance.

-to participate in or facilitate shared parenting.

-to visit a person in an extended household.

-to meet a legal obligation including satisfying bail conditions, to participate in legal proceedings, to comply with a court mandate in terms of sentence imposed or to register a birth.

-for attendance at court including a remote jury centre, an inquiry, a children’s hearing, tribunal proceedings or to resolve a dispute via Alternative Dispute Resolution.

– for essential animal welfare reasons, such as exercising or feeding a horse or going to a vet.

– local outdoor recreation, sport or exercise, walking, cycling, golf, or running that starts and finishes at the same place (which can be up to 5 miles from the boundary of your local authority area) as long as you abide by the rules on meeting other households

-to attend a marriage ceremony or registration of a civil partnership.

-to attend a funeral or for compassionate reasons which relate to the end of a person’s life. This includes gatherings related to the scattering or interring of ashes, a stone setting ceremony and other similar commemorative events.

-if you are a minister of religion or worship leader, for the purposes of leading an act of worship (broadcast or online), conducting a marriage or civil partnership ceremony or a funeral.

– to donate blood.

-for activities in connection with moving home (including viewing a property), or for activities in connection with the maintenance, purchase, sale, letting, or rental of residential property that the person owns or is otherwise responsible for.

– Travelling for the purposes of undertaking essential work on a property other than your main residence should not be used as a pretext for a holiday. You should not stay longer than for the length of time required to undertake the necessary work.

-to avoid injury, illness or to escape a risk of harm.
for those involved in professional sports, for training, coaching or competing in an event.

-to visit a person receiving treatment in a hospital, staying in a hospice or care home, or to accompany a person to a medical appointment.

-to register or vote in a Scottish or UK Parliament, Local Government or overseas election or by-election, including on behalf of someone else by proxy

-to visit a person detained in prison, young offenders institute, remand centre, secure accommodation or other place of detention.

Contact with other households

Up to 2 people from 2 separate households can meet outdoors for sport, exercise or social interaction.

Takeaways

Takeaways can still operate as normal, providing food is sold for consumption off premises. Face coverings and physical distancing rules must be followed.

Businesses that can stay open

The businesses which must close at Level 4 are set out in law. Those that can remain open are:

  • food retailers, including food markets, supermarkets, convenience stores and corner shops
  • off-licences and licensed shops selling alcohol (including breweries)
  • pharmacies (including non-dispensing pharmacies) and chemists
  • newsagents
  • building merchants and suppliers of products and tools used in building work and repairs
  • petrol stations
  • car repair and MOT services
  • bicycle shops
  • taxi or vehicle hire businesses
  • banks, building societies, credit unions, short-term loan providers, savings clubs, cash points and undertakings which by way of business operate a currency exchange office, transmit money (or any representation of money) by any means or cash cheques which are made payable to customers
  • post offices
  • funeral directors
  • laundrettes and dry cleaners
  • dental services, opticians, audiology services, chiropody services, chiropractors, osteopaths and other medical or health services, including services relating to mental health
  • veterinary surgeons and pet shops
  • agricultural supplies shops and agricultural markets
  • storage and distribution facilities, including delivery drop off or collection points, where the facilities are in the premises of a business included in this sub-paragraph
  • car parks
  • public toilets
  • livestock markets or auctions
  • outdoor markets, and outdoor car lots

Lockdown Scottish government


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