New isolation orders for people in NSW: Anyone who has visited Melbourne since June 24 will be forced to stay at home for two weeks
- A new isolation order is in place for those who have returned to NSW from VIC
- Anyone who has been in Greater Melbourne since June 24 must self isolate
- It doesn't matter when they returned to NSW, they must enter 14-day quarantine
- The retrospective order is effective immediately, impacting thousands of people
A new isolation order has been imposed for people in NSW who have visited Greater Melbourne in the last two weeks.
Anyone who has been in the area since June 24 and returned to NSW must immediately enter 14 days of home self-isolation, Nine News reports.
The order comes as NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian on Thursday foreshadowed a tightening of coronavirus restrictions.
'It doesn’t take very long for things to escalate quickly,' she said.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian said on Thursday that the risk of contagion in NSW is 'very high'
'And it doesn’t take very long for that rate of community transmission to increase and so all of us have to be on high alert.'
Nine political reporter Chris O'Keefe, who broke the news on Thursday night's bulletin, said the new measure could potentially affect 'tens of thousands of people' who have recently returned to NSW.
The regulation may also impact AFL teams who have travelled between the neighbouring states for matches, creating a chaotic situation for the league as players retreat into quarantine.
Earlier on Thursday, NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian said while the rate of community transmission remains low, there was no reason to tighten social-distancing restrictions among the majority of residents.
However, she said it could take weeks to determine if 'potential seeding that may have occurred in those border communities and also throughout other parts of New South Wales' has crossed from Victoria into her state.

The VIC and NSW border closed on Tuesday in a bid to prevent the second wave of COVID-19 in Melbourne from spilling over into the neighbouring state. Police are pictured stopping and questioning drivers at a checkpoint on July 8 in Albury
Ms Berejiklian warned that conditions could change rapidly as the situation unfolds.
'I do want everybody to feel on high alert,' the Premier said.
'Because if we do get results, if the data starts changing and we need to act quickly.
'I want people to know that for the next two to three weeks in particular, all of us have to be on high alert.'
NSW Police Commissioner Mick Fuller has indicated the border closure with Victoria could last up to six weeks, the same duration of the stage three lockdown placed on Melbourne from midnight Wednesday.
Ms Berejiklian is also considering shifting the state border to the north and annexing Albury to Victoria until the outbreak is brought under control.
This would allow residents of both towns to cross state lines freely and minimise disruption to the community while also preventing the virus from spreading deeper into NSW.

Dozens of medical personnel gather outside of a housing complex in Melbourne on Tuesday as as they conducted COVID-19 testing blitz on residents
She has also flagged making exemption permits to cross the border more difficult to obtain.
More than 50,000 exemption permits were issued over Tuesday night allowing people living in NSW-Victoria border communities to cross between the two.
Victoria recorded 134 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, its second-highest single-day total since the pandemic began after a record 191 infections on Tuesday.
Fears the horror outbreak could jump state lines have been exacerbated after three people returning from Melbourne tested positive to the virus in NSW this week.
NSW recorded 13 new cases of coronavirus on Thursday, of which 11 were returned travellers in hotel quarantine.
The two other cases were Albury residents, with one of persons recently visiting Melbourne before coming into contact with the other.