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Test captain Tim Paine is reportedly being investigated by Cricket Australia for allegedly sending explicit messages to a female co-worker.
The veteran wicketkeeper, who is facing a race against time to be fit for the Ashes Test on December 8, has been named in a News Corp report as being at the centre of a sexting scandal.
Paine is due to front media in Hobart on Friday.
It is understood the messages date back to 2017, months before Paine was recalled to the Test team after a seven-year absence.
Paine was elevated to the captaincy in March 2018 following the explosive fallout from the ball-tampering scandal in South Africa.
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Tasmania is offering iPads and other prizes to 12-18 year olds who get vaccinated against coronavirus, due to a lagging rate of uptake among teenagers.
Premier Peter Gutwein says a five-day vaccination blitz targeting the demographic will begin on Saturday.
"If you're aged 12 to 18 and have had a first or second dose of the vaccine by the 24th you will be in a draw with a chance to win an iPad and iPhone or an Apple watch,," he said on Friday.
The state government wants 90 per cent of people over 12 to be fully vaccinated by the time it throws open borders on December 15 to all travellers who've had both doses.
Mr Gutwein warned Tasmania's overall vaccination rate was slowing and the island state would only just reach that target.
"We've had many conversations about what we can do to pick the vaccination rate up," he said.
"Where I don't want to be on December the 16th is looking back and saying, 'Gee, I wish that we done a little bit more'."
Mr Gutwein said 50 prizes would be offered as part of the draw.
More than 84 per cent of Tasmanians over 16 are fully vaccinated, while 92 per cent have had one dose.
In the 12-15 age group, about 50 per cent are fully vaccinated and 68 per cent have had one dose.
Mr Gutwein also announced the state would lift restrictions on dancing and standing drinking on December 6, provided patrons at the venues were fully vaccinated.
On December 15, Tasmania will open to all travellers, provided they've had a negative virus test in the 72 hours before arriving.
People coming from low-risk areas are exempt.
The state is closed to NSW, Victoria, the ACT, plus hotspot areas in Queensland and the Northern Territory.
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Vaccinated Victorians will be allowed back onto dancefloors, as the state looks towards a summer of freedoms many have not seen since the pandemic began.
Almost all remaining COVID-19 restrictions will be scrapped from 11:59pm Thursday, as the state approaches 90 per cent full vaccination in those aged over 12.
From Friday, double-dosed Victorians can dance in clubs, home visitor limits as well as cafe, bar and restaurant density caps will be scrapped and masks will not be required for hospitality customers.
Premier Daniel Andrews said "almost all" rules can now fall away thanks to the state's strong COVID-19 vaccine uptake.
"You will be able to go back to normal," he told reporters.
"Victoria, like perhaps no other part of the country, has earned these freedoms."
Non-essential retail will join the state's vaccinated economy, meaning only fully vaccinated people can visit those shops unless they are aged under 12 years and two months or have a valid exemption.
While masks will no longer be required for customers visiting hospitality venues, workers must continue wearing them.
Masks will not be needed in workplaces such as offices, but will be required in primary schools, health, aged care or justice settings.
They must also be worn on public transport, ride-shares or taxis, and will remain for a few more weeks in retail.
Indoor events will be allowed to host up to 30,000 punters, however one-off approval is needed to exceed that capacity.
Events held outdoors can exceed 30,000 if they publish their COVID-Safe plans, meaning the Boxing Day Test and Australian Open can proceed at full capacity subject to approval.
There are also changes to isolation rules, with people who test positive required to quarantine for 10 days instead of 14.
Positive cases will be tasked with contacting the people they saw before their diagnosis, including their workplace, school or childcare, as the health department will no longer be managing contacts.
The department can still impose quarantine periods on a case-by-case basis, but exposure sites will not be published any more.
Close contacts of confirmed cases outside their home will still need to get tested and isolate until a negative result, but are no longer required to self-quarantine.
Isolation for fully vaccinated household contacts will halve to seven days.
Acting Chief Health Officer Ben Cowie said there will be a "period of adjustment" while people get used to their new freedoms and he warned that virus transmission will continue.
"We will see ongoing transmission of the virus in the community, there will be significant cases," he said.
"But for vaccinated people, they are so much less likely to get seriously ill, to end up in hospital, to end up in intensive care, or... to lose their lives."
Victoria is now 88 per cent double-vaccinated in those aged over 12 and is expected to hit 90 per cent this weekend.
The state recorded 1007 new COVID-19 cases and 12 deaths on Thursday.
There are 337 virus patients in hospital, with 63 active COVID-19 cases in ICU, 65 have been cleared, and 34 on ventilators.
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Vaccinated Victorians will be allowed back onto dancefloors, as the state looks towards a "fantastic" summer of freedoms many have not seen since before the pandemic.
Almost all remaining COVID-19 restrictions will be scrapped from 11:59pm Thursday, as the state approaches 90 per cent full vaccination in those aged over 12.
From Friday, double-dosed Victorians can dance in clubs, home visitor limits as well as cafe, bar and restaurant density caps will be scrapped and masks will not be required for hospitality customers.
Premier Daniel Andrews said "almost all" rules can now fall away thanks to the state's strong COVID-19 vaccine uptake.
"You will be able to go back to normal," he told reporters.
"Victoria, like perhaps no other part of the country, has earned these freedoms."
Non-essential retail will join the state's vaccinated economy, meaning only fully vaccinated people can visit those shops unless they are aged under 12 years and two months or have a valid exemption.
While masks will no longer be required for customers visiting hospitality venues, workers must continue wearing them.
Masks will not be needed in workplaces such as offices, but will be required in primary schools, health, aged care or justice settings.
They must also be worn on public transport, ride-shares or taxis and remain for a few more weeks in retail.
Indoor events will be allowed to host up to 30,000 punters, however one-off approval is needed to exceed that capacity.
Events held outdoors can exceed 30,000 if they publish their COVID-Safe plans, meaning the Boxing Day Test and Australian Open can proceed at full capacity subject to approval.
There are also changes to isolation rules, with people who test positive required to quarantine for 10 days instead of 14.
Positive cases will be tasked with contacting the people they saw before their diagnosis, including their workplace, school or childcare, as the health department will no longer be managing contacts.
The department can still impose quarantine periods on a case-by-case basis, but exposure sites will not be published any more.
Close contacts of confirmed cases outside their home will still need to get tested and isolate until a negative result, but are no longer required to self-quarantine.
Isolation for fully vaccinated household contacts will halve to seven days.
Acting Chief Health Officer Ben Cowie said there will be a "period of adjustment" while people get used to their new freedoms and he warned that virus transmission will continue.
"We will see ongoing transmission of the virus in the community, there will be significant cases," he said.
"But for vaccinated people, they are so much less likely to get seriously ill, to end up in hospital, to end up in intensive care, or...to lose their lives."
Victoria is now 88 per cent double-vaccinated in those aged over 12 and is expected to hit 90 per cent this weekend.
The state recorded 1007 new COVID-19 cases and 12 deaths on Thursday.
There are 337 virus patients in hospital, with 63 active COVID-19 cases in ICU, 65 have been cleared, and 34 on ventilators.
© AAP 2021
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