NI Executive Covid-19 Update For 21st April 2020

Executive Daily Update: Initiatives to deal with Coronavirus (21 April 2020)

Northern Ireland Executive ministers and their officials have over the past 24 hours been involved in a number of initiatives and critical decisions relating to the Coronavirus emergency.

The website, which is designed to reach those who do not have a smartphone but are able to use a computer or tablet, provides advice on Covid-19 and its symptoms and also information on the community services available for the most vulnerable.

The Department of Health today launched an online version of the Covid-19 NI app to help people across Northern Ireland stay informed about the Coronavirus.

In conjunction with the 111 NI Helpline, the app and website are designed to relieve pressure on frontline care services by answering queries and helping members of the public to:

  • decide if they, or someone they care for, have the symptoms of coronavirus;
  • understand the severity of their symptoms and what to do and how to cope;
  • decide if they need to get clinical advice and how to access it;
  • access specific advice for vulnerable members of the community;
  • get an isolation note if they are advised to self-isolate;
  • ask specific questions of the advice and guidance using a smart search ‘chat-bot’ that searches FAQs for relevant information; and
  • find links to other trusted information resources.

The mobile smartphone app has been widely downloaded with over 48,000 active users and up to 6,000 people using it each day to assess their symptoms, or find other information. It has, to date, attracted strong approval ratings from users in Northern Ireland.

Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs Minister Edwin Poots wrote to key workers in the waste industry today to express his gratitude for their continuing efforts to protect public health and the environment during the Covid-19 emergency.

The letter from Minister Poots read: “It is key workers such as yourselves, who are vital to keeping our country going throughout these trying times. To those who have helped maintain kerbside collections, those responsible for municipal cleansing, the people working in our recycling centres, treatment plants, recovery facilities, those maintaining our disposal sites and to everyone working behind the scenes to make sure our waste is dealt with properly – thank you.

“Your continued work through such difficult times, has helped to ensure public health and the environment are protected. Your contribution has been essential to society and the economy – the importance of which should not be understated.”

Minister Poots repeated his call for members of the public to respect waste industry workers and to follow the guidance on washing their hands and disinfecting their wheelie and recycling bin handles before putting them out for collection.

Minister Pootsand the Northern Ireland Fire & Rescue Service also issued an appeal to farmers and the public for their help during the current dry weather to avoid wildfires during the Covid-19 crisis.

With the recent spell of hot and dry weather leaving the countryside vulnerable to fires caused by burning of vegetation or waste, he warned the littering and dumping of waste materials would not only damage the environment but put the emergency services, other human lives, property and wildlife at risk.

Minister Poots stressed: “It is important that we all play our part in protecting our communities and vulnerable citizens during this national emergency, to ensure that we do not add unnecessary pressures to the emergency services. I’m urging the public to take extreme caution because wildfires could result in tragedy for people caught in the line of a fire – don’t burn waste or vegetation and don’t fly-tip or drop litter.”

If you see a fire in the countryside:

  • report it immediately to the Fire & Rescue Service;
  • do not attempt to tackle fires that cannot be put out with a bucket of water;
  • leave the area as soon as possible; and
  • if you see someone setting fires, report it to the PSNI.

If you do know people who are fire setting, let the PSNI know to assist with prosecutions.

If you are in the countryside:

  • extinguish cigarettes and other flammable materials properly;
  • never throw cigarette ends out of car windows;
  • avoid using open fires in the countryside; and
  • be considerate in parking vehicles so as not to impede access by emergency vehicles.