Two likely COVID-19 cases in Melbourne dailymercury.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymercury.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Victorian health officials have blamed a receipt for its coronavirus bungle, which saw Melburnians ordered to get tested weeks after the city’s last case.
Date Time
Urgent COVID-19 advice from victorian department of Health
Anyone who visited Woolworths Epping North, at the corner of Epping Road and Lyndarum Drive, on 8 May between 5.40 – 6.38pm to get tested if they are unwell.
A new COVID-19 pop-up testing site will be open tomorrow (Saturday 22 May) at Epping Soccer Stadium on Harvest Home Road, Epping.
Other testing sites open over the weekend include:
DPV Health on Schrotters Road, Mernda from 9.30am – 4.30pm
Nexus Primary Health, Wallan from 9am – 5pm
Melbourne Pathology, Epping from 8.30am – 11am (Saturday only)
Northern Hospital, Epping from 9am – 5pm
4Cyte Pathology, Epping from 10am – 5pm
Customers and staff who visited a Woolworths have been urged to isolate and get tested immediately after coronavirus traces were found in sewage water.
The warning applies to anyone who visited the store at the Epping North supermarket on the corner of Epping Road and Lyndarum Drive in Melbourne s far north on May 8 between 5.40pm and 6.38pm. We are encouraging anyone with symptoms of Covid-19 – fever, sore throat, cough, shortness of breath, and loss or change in sense of smell or taste – to get tested, Victoria s Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton said.
Customers and staff who visited a Melbourne Woolworths have been urged to isolate and get tested immediately after coronavirus traces were found in sewage water (health officials in Melbourne pictured)
By Barbara Rimkunas
“Our little quiet village today, is alive, there is a circus in town, and the railroad annual meeting meets here today, which brings people from all parts, some for amusement, some for Business, some to get money, and some to get rum, I have heard and saw more intoxicated today than I should want to see in a long life.”
It is clear, from her diary entry on September 8th, 1852, that Hannah Brown was not a lover of frivolity. As a small shareholder of the Boston and Maine railroad, she attended the annual meeting and not the circus. What is not clear, from her diary, is whether the drunkenness she so disapproved of was the result of circus goers or rail investors.