Frontline workers paralysed by Pingdemic chaos will get access to 200 new testing sites from Monday – but there is still confusion as to who will use them and why the government took so long.

Frontline workers paralysed by Pingdemic chaos will get access to 200 new testing sites from Monday – but there is still confusion as to who will use them and why the government has taken so long to act.  
Some police, firefighters, Border Force staff and transport workers were already eligible for a self-isolation exemption, but only if their employers specified their names and they were double-jabbed against Covid-19.
The Government on Saturday said in a statement that an expected initial extra 200 testing sites would be opened so that daily contact testing could be ‘rolled out to further critical workplaces in England’.
But currently around 2.3million people from critical areas and jobs have been forced into isolation due to being pinged. 
And it came as it was claimed the system causing the problem could not be stopped – because there is not enough testing capacity to allow the ‘test and release’ method to take over.
The chaotic situation sparked harsh words from some sectors over the lack of clarity from the authorities. 
Nick Allen, chief executive of the British Meat Processors Association, added: ‘We desperately need this detail and need it quickly.
‘The last we heard, communication could be coming on Monday, so we have a long weekend to get through yet. We need a sense of urgency here.’ 
Some 200 new test centres are going to be set up throughout the country to try and stem the chaos caused by the pindemic
Freedom day has prompted an extraordinary onslaught of pings to people following the coronavirus rules still left
Richard Harrow, chief executive of the Frozen Food Federation, said: ‘The Government announcement last night that parts of the supply chain will be allowed to test and release workers that are pinged by Track and Trace only goes part of the way.
‘It shows that yet again Government does not understand how connected the food supply chain is.
Only opening part is unlikely to solve the overall issue. Plus, who is in and who is out, who decides and how do they decide?
‘Confusion continues to pervade and I have been advised no list until Monday. This is worse than useless.’
Cornwall Airport Newquay said it was being ‘very much affected’ by staff shortages due to isolation orders and its boss was not optimistic over discussions over exemptions with the Department for Transport.
Managing director Peter Downes told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘We’ve been told to expect exemptions in very small numbers of people, in ones and twos, rather than large numbers of staff. 
The empty bottled water shelves in Tesco in Cambridge on Thursday morning due to the ‘pingdemic’
Empty shelves in Asda as Britain was caught in a perfect storm of staff shortages and a lack of lorry drivers
Empty shelves and signs on the soft drinks aisle of a Sainsbury’s store in Blackheath, Rowley Regis. Bosses asked customers to ‘bear with us’ blaming ‘high demand’
A long run of empty shelves in Lidl, Saltash, Cornwall as the ‘pingdemic’ grips the country forcing thousands of supermarket workers and lorry drivers into quarantine. The ‘Middle of Lidl’ section is usually piled high with bargains
Fury as ministers dash to exempt 10,000 critical workers from self-isolation after FINALLY waking up to threat ‘pingdemic’ could collapse supply chains and spark ‘biggest food shortages since the war’
Ministers today insisted 10,000 critical workers will be exempted from self-isolation rules almost immediately after finally waking up to warnings the ‘pingdemic’ could collapse food supply chains.
Environment Secretary George Eustice said staff at around 500 sites including supermarket depots will no longer need to quarantine if they come into contact with a positive Covid case.
He stressed that firms will not need to apply to be covered by the ‘big’ change, amid confusion over the emergency measures being taken by ministers to stop supply chains collapsing. 
Admitting that the government needed to think again after businesses raised the alarm over the sheer scale of absences, he said: ‘We will never take risks with our food supply.’ The Cabinet minister said the military was ‘always on standby’, but there were currently no plans to call on them.  
However, Mr Eustice risked the wrath of other sectors that are being hammered by the escalating problems as he made clear there is no prospect of hospitality staff getting the same treatment. And he declined to give a categorical commitment that fully vaccinated people will be let off isolation rules from August 16 as planned.   
The comments came as owners of some of the country’s largest food producers including the UK’s ‘Chicken King’ revealed they are at ‘crisis point’ – with a lack of poultry and milk on supermarket shelves and warnings of the ‘most serious food shortages that this country has seen in over 75 years’.
‘When we have between a quarter and a third in some cases of individual teams being pinged by the system in one go, and as soon as you get people back you’re often losing others to fresh notifications, we don’t believe that the scheme is going to cater for that.’
One industry not to feature in the exemptions list was hospitality, with its trade association warning the sector will have ‘one hand tied behind our back’ as staff are forced into isolation over Covid-19 contacts during what should be the peak season.
Calling for a ‘more pragmatic solution’, UKHospitality chief executive Kate Nicholls said: ‘We now face a summer of venue closures and reduced service, when we should be at a seasonal peak.
‘The sector will do all it can to provide great service, but it will be with one hand tied behind our back. 
‘Those who are fully vaccinated should be able to test after a ping and, subject to a negative result, carry on with their lives. For those not fully vaccinated two negative tests should be sufficient to return to work.’
Home Secretary Priti Patel insisted: ‘Daily testing will keep our frontline teams safe while they continue to serve the public and communities across our country.’
The expansion came after the Government on Thursday announced its programme would allow thousands of workers at up to 500 sites in the food sector to avoid the need to self-isolate if identified as a contact of a coronavirus case, and instead take daily Covid tests.
Discontent with the Government’s self-isolation policy was growing at the weekend as food industry bosses condemned changes to ease the ‘pingdemic’ , hospitality leaders warned of a summer of closures and train operators were forced to cut services.
Pressure has mounted on Downing Street to bring forward the date at which people who are double vaccinated against coronavirus can avoid self-isolation.
There were increasing calls for Boris Johnson to bring forward his wider relaxation of quarantine rules for the fully vaccinated from August 16 as businesses were hampered by staff being told to isolate as coronavirus cases soar.
In a bid to calm the concerns of industry, ministers published a limited list of sectors whose double-jabbed workers are eligible to avoid isolation if they undergo daily testing before the wider easing of rules for England.
Industry leaders said the move did not include sufficient workers but doctors warned the problem is that the Prime Minister has let the virus ‘rip’ and not the ‘pings’ being issued by the NHS Covid-19 app to tell coronavirus contacts to isolate.
The mounting criticism came as data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed Covid-19 cases continued to rise, with around one in 75 people in England infected.
The guidance lists 16 sectors: energy, civil nuclear, digital infrastructure, food production and supply, waste, water, veterinary medicines, essential chemicals, essential transport, medicines, medical devices, clinical consumable supplies, emergency services, border control, essential defence and local government
‘Pingdemic’ chaos in London as TfL closes lines as 300 staff self isolate
 Transport for London has been forced to close both the Circle and Hammersmith and City Tube lines for the entire weekend after 300 staff were ‘pinged’ by the NHS Covid tracking app. 
There will also be changes to the District and Metropolitan lines and short cancellations elsewhere as the so-called ‘pingdemic’ continues to bring transport networks to their knees. 
Reduced timetables will also hit railways across England in a bid to improve reliability following a spate of last-minute cancellations. 
It comes as ministers have tried to cool rising tensions and warnings of food shortages by unveiling plans to exempt 10,000 critical workers from the self-isolation rules – but some industry bosses say the measures do not go far enough. 
London Underground managing director Andy Lord said: ‘We apologise to customers for the impact on Tube services, while we deal with staff shortages across the network due to self-isolation. We are committed to running a frequent and reliable service, but with a reduced number of staff available it’s not always possible.’
The estimate of the number testing positive – 741,700 – in the week to July 17 is the highest since the week to January 30.
There has been mounting pressure for weeks on the government to tweak the sensitivity of the app or make exemptions for key workers and fully vaccinated Britons following warnings that it could lead to food shortages and major disruptions as the epidemic grows.  
Sainsbury’s, Tesco, Aldi, Morrisons, Asda, M&S and Waitrose are seeing significant gaps on the shelves in most aisles, but specifically wine, frozen food, fresh meat such as minced beef, dairy products such as cheese, pizzas, bottled water, fruit, vegetables and packaged salads and cooked meats. 
One shopper at Lidl in Mirfield West Yorkshire told MailOnline the situation was an ‘utter joke’ and felt like the start of the 2020 lockdown.
They described ’empty freezers, hardly any wine and virtually no detergent’, adding: ‘Next there will be rationing’. 
Iceland boss Richard Walker has warned that Britain’s creaking food supply chains are on the brink of collapse causing shortages of products in shops with 1,000 of his staff – one in 20 – among the 1.7million Britons currently stuck at home. 
UK supermarkets are in the midst of a perfect storm of staff and stock problems with tens of thousands of workers self-isolating because of the ‘pingdemic’. 
The struggle to stack shelves and staff stores and warehouses is being made worse by a lack of lorry drivers to deliver food.
The Road Haulage Association believes the country is 100,000 HGV drivers short – and thousands of prospective drivers are waiting for their HGV tests due to a backlog caused by lockdown, while many existing ones have returned to the EU from the UK after Brexit.
It came as businesses, including one of Britain’s largest food distribution firms, Bidfood, began taking the crisis into their own hands and began advising workers who are pinged by the NHS app to take tests and continue working rather than stay at home for up to ten days as the Government suggests.
Mr Kwarteng said: ‘The rule is very clear, we should self-isolate. It’s as simple as that.
‘If you are pinged, you should self-isolate.
I’m not going to countenance people breaking the rules or anything like that.
‘I think they should just follow them’. 
Ping threat to staycations: Tourism, hospitality and rail bosses despair as they are forced to close due to staff self-isolating during the pingdemic 
ByMario Ledwithand David Churchilland Greg Kirby For The Daily MailHotels, restaurants, tourist attractions and rail lines are being forced to close because of the pingdemic leaving staycations in crisis.
Millions of families are set to embark on holidays in the UK this weekend, but the wave of closures threatens to throw their plans into chaos.
As rail operators across the country announced sweeping cancellations, business owners last night warned the crisis could be the ‘final straw’.
In the popular staycation destination of Torbay, Devon, an astonishing 10 per cent of businesses have closed due to staff being ‘pinged’ by the NHS Covid-19 app.
Carolyn Custerson, head of the English Riviera Bid which represents the tourism industry in Torbay, said: ‘We are in a crisis as regards to staffing. I think the Government has been really short-sighted. We are really quite angry.’ Travellers across the country face further chaos amid warnings that hundreds of trains could be cancelled this weekend and next week.
Millions of families are set to embark on holidays in the UK this weekend, but the wave of closures to hotels, restaurants, tourist attractions and rail lines threatens to throw their plans into chaos (Pictured: People gather on the beach at Sennen Cove in Cornwall in June this year)
An estimated 1,200 of the country’s 25,000 train drivers are isolating, with 300 London Underground staff affected and the Circle and Hammersmith and City Tube lines shut this weekend.
The shortages have seen rail operators Thameslink and Southern cut weekday timetables on five routes from Monday ‘until further notice’. Network Rail said that train crew shortages now account for around 40 per cent of all cancellations, compared with around 15 per cent before the pingdemic.
Business owners pinning their hopes on a ‘staycation boom’ yesterday told of their despair.
Torquay’s Babbacombe Theatre was this week forced to close for ten days with the cast of 12 isolating. Owner Colin Matthews said: ‘This was the week we were going to be able to go back to full capacity but instead of getting back into profit we have gone backwards.’
Blue bars show the number of ‘pings’ sent by the NHS app each week; red bars show the number of people contacted by Test and Trace call handlers; and yellow bars show the number of people who tested positive for Covid
Helen Heraty, owner of the award-winning Grays Court Hotel and The Bow Room Restaurant in York, has closed the business after nine of her 22 staff were told to isolate, cancelling 100 bookings.
She said: ‘All of the gains made over the last few weeks were stripped away. We just scraped through the pandemic after not trading for seven months. It will be the final straw for a lot of businesses.’
Fran Collins, chief executive of Red Funnel which runs ferries between the south coast and the Isle of Wight, said the pingdemic was causing mayhem for people heading there for a holiday. 
She said: ‘Currently 30 per cent of our operational staff are unable to work, with many team members self-isolating.’