Nicola Sturgeon delays ditching face masks after rise in Covid cases
The First Minister pushed back the date when Scots will no longer be required to wear face coverings in some public spaces.

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Your support makes all the difference.Scotland is making āsteady progress back to normal lifeā, Nicola Sturgeon has insisted, despite pushing back the date for ditching laws for people to wear face coverings on public transport and in some settings.
The Scottish First Minister had previously signalled this would move from being a legal requirement to being guidance on Monday, March 21.
However, she told MSPs that the ācurrent spikeā in cases, ministers had agreed it was āprudentā for this measure to remain in place.
While Ms Sturgeon said she knew this would be ādisappointingā she urged people to ābe patient for a little while longerā.
Given the current spike in case numbers, we consider it prudent to retain this requirement in regulation for a further short period
The First Minister gave her latest Covid-19 update to Holyrood as new figures showed 38,770 new cases of the virus have been confirmed since Saturday March 12.
The number of coronavirus patients in hospital has also continued to rise to the highest level for more than a year.
There were 1,996 people in hospital on Monday with recently confirmed Covid-19, up 191 on the previous day, with 33 in intensive care, up six.
Ms Sturgeon told the Scottish Parliament that the legal requirement for businesses to keep customersā details in case these are needed for contact tracing will end as planned on Monday, March 21.
But speaking about requirements on the wearing of face coverings, she said: āGiven the current spike in case numbers, we consider it prudent to retain this requirement in regulation for a further short period.ā
The First Minister added: āEnsuring continued widespread use of face coverings will provide some additional protection ā particularly for the most vulnerable ā at a time when the risk of infection is very high, and it may help us get over this spike more quickly.ā
The legal requirement will be reviewed again in two weeksā time, she added, with Ms Sturgeon saying the āexpectationā was that it will become guidance rather than the law in āearly Aprilā.
She went on to tell MSPs that advice on testing would also change next month, saying that from April 18 āwe will no longer advise people without symptoms to test twice weeklyā.
The First Minister added: āWith the exception of health and care settings, the advice to test regularly will also end from April 18 for workplaces, and for early learning and childcare settings, mainstream and special schools, and universities and colleges.ā
People who are a close contact of someone who is confirmed as having Covid will continue to be advised to do daily lateral flow tests until the end of April, Ms Sturgeon added.
And those with symptoms of the virus will be advised to get a PCR test up until that date.
After that, Ms Sturgeon said: āOur intention is that from the end of April all routine population-wide testing will end, including for those who have symptoms.
āContact tracing will end at this point too ā although people with symptoms of respiratory illness will be advised to stay at home.ā
Test sites will close at the end of next month, with the First Minister saying from May 1 testing will be used instead āon a targeted basisā and for for surveillance purposes.
Speaking about the changes she added: āToday marks steady progress back to normal life and a more sustainable way of managing this virus.ā
Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross said there was always a chance Covid cases would rise after restrictions were eased, as they were earlier this month, and that should not be a reason to keep the requirement for face coverings.
āItās true that case numbers are higher now than any of us would like, but Covid cases were always going to rise when restrictions were eased,ā he said.
Why won't the First Minister trust the Scottish public to take the steps they think are right to protect themselves and their families?
āWe canāt get complacent with Covid but we have to move forward. We canāt stay stuck with Covid rules forever.ā
The Tory leader asked: āWhy wonāt the First Minister trust the Scottish public to take the steps they think are right to protect themselves and their families?ā
He went on to push for a firm date for the ending of the face coverings requirement, as well as what criteria would need to be met for the rule to be scrapped.
The First Minister stressed that, apart from the face covering rule, āevery single legal measureā will have been lifted.
āGiven the spike weāre seeing in cases right now and the very high risk of infection, this helps us protect each other,ā she said.
āIn particular, during this spike, it helps us to protect the most vulnerable in our communities and I think it will help us to get this spike under control more quickly than might otherwise be the case.ā
The First Minister added: āI think that is very much in the spirit of solidarity and mutual concern for each other that has characterised the publicās response to this pandemic over the past two years.ā
Much of the public, Ms Sturgeon went on to say, would āwelcome this precautionary moveā given the high case rates.