Title

HEALTH

Councils will play their part in track and trace

Councils want to play their part in track and trace plans to limit the spread of coronavirus, the Local Government Association has said.

Councils want to play their part in track and trace plans to limit the spread of coronavirus, the Local Government Association has said.

The Government outlined its plans for an army of thousands of contact tracers to be trained within weeks in an effort to get the country out of lockdown.

Council staff are lined up as part of a three-tier system to locate and isolate anyone potentially infected with COVID-19 before they pass the virus on.

As the country reaches what is expected to be the peak of cases, Public Health England aims to put the new strategy in place within weeks so the Government can start to ease restrictions.

The government plans three levels of contract tracing. An App would automatically alert people who had come near anyone who is later diagnosed with coronavirus.

Public Health England's most experienced staff would trace outbreaks in hospitals, care homes and other high risk settings.

A further tier of around 18,000 investigators is also planning – and the government aims to make use of council staff such as environmental health officers. NHS volunteers are also being considered.

Cllr Ian Hudspeth, chairman of the LGA's community wellbeing board, said the plans needed to make use of local knowledge, and they would need to be supported by additional funding.

‘Councils want to play their full part in the national effort to defeat this disease. Directors of Public Health working in councils, alongside a range of other local services such as environmental health, public health including sexual health services and infection control nurses already have the experience of testing and contact tracing in their communities.

‘They have the necessary skills to work with Government on this, to scale up the system at pace and shape this at a local level.'

But he warned: ‘This extra demand on existing services would need to be met by additional resources and funding, if councils are to help test, trace and isolate those with COVID-19.'

HEALTH

Keeping an eye on the election count

By Piali Das Gupta | 31 March 2026

Piali Das Gupta looks ahead to what promises to be a time of great change for local government.

HEALTH

Report finds 'optimism bias' in council projections

By Neil Merrick | 30 March 2026

Brighton and Hove city councillors were guilty of ‘optimism bias’ in forecasting the popularity of the i360 seafront tower, a report has found.

HEALTH

Marvin the Paranoid Android's secret council reorganisation diary

By Blair McPherson | 30 March 2026

Brought in to advise a council with reorganisation, Marvin the Paranoid Android’s suggestions don’t go down well. He concludes the real challenge facing this...

HEALTH

Why more areas should become Boroughs of Sport

By Cllr Ross Garrod | 27 March 2026

Merton is on a mission to become London’s first Borough of Sport, says Ross Garrod. He sets out five simple steps it used to adopt a whole council approach t...

Heather Jameson

Popular articles by Heather Jameson