Sydney's Covid cases rise AGAIN to 177 with 46 infectious in the community as Gladys brings in more restrictions for shopping, orders tough restriction for another 94 suburbs but flags MORE cash ahead of another four weeks of lockdown
- Sydney's stay-at-home lockdown has been extended for another four weeks
- Came as 177 cases of highly-contagious Delta strain recorded in state overnight
- NSW Health also confirmed death of a woman in her 90s at Liverpool Hospital
- Three more local government areas are under tightened essential worker rules
Sydney's stay-at-home lockdown has been extended for another four weeks to stem the spread of the highly-contagious Delta strain of Covid-19.
New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian announced the lockdown extension on Wednesday morning as she announced another 177 cases of the virus had been recorded in the state overnight.
She said 46 of those cases were infectious in the community.
Health officials found 90 infections in south-west Sydney and 46 cases in the city's west in the 24 hours to 8pm.
NSW Health also confirmed the death of a woman in her 90s at Liverpool Hospital in Sydney's south-west; there are now 11 fatalities across the state linked to the latest outbreak of the Delta variant.
Five million residents in Greater Sydney - including the Central Coast, the Blue Mountains, Wollongong and Shellharbour - have spent nearly five weeks under strict home orders in a desperate attempt to slow the rate of transmission in the city.
The new extension will expire on Saturday, August 28 at 12.01am.
Ms Berejiklian on Wednesday announced she was also ring-fencing three more local government areas - Parramatta, Campbelltown and Georges River - from 11.59pm on Wednesday night in an attempt to contain the virus' spread.
Only authorised essential workers will be allowed to leave those LGAs for work. Two million Sydneysiders living across 94 suburbs in eight government areas are now subject to the tightened travel restrictions.
The state leader said an extended lockdown was the 'obvious' solution given the number of community cases was still increasing.
'It was fairly obvious, given the way the numbers were going in the last few days, it would have not been possible for us to get out of lockdown tomorrow or Friday,' she said.

Pictured are pedestrians walking with coffees in hand in Darling Point in Sydney's east. The city's stay-at-home lockdown has been extended for another four weeks to stem the spread of the highly-contagious Delta strain of Covid-19

Shoppers wearing face masks walk along Beamish Street at Campsie in Sydney's south-west

Essential workers leaving Canterbury-Bankstown will need to be tested every three days. Pictured are three masked pedestrians in Auburn in Sydney's western suburbs
'It would not have been realistic for the NSW government to make a decision [on ending the lockdown] in the next two weeks given where we are today.'
All Greater Sydneysiders have also now been told they can now only travel 10km for essential shopping if what they need to buy is available locally.
Construction sites will be allowed to re-open with enhanced Covid-safe protocols from July 31 after a two-week shutdown.
From August 16, Year 12 students will return to face-to-face learning and those going into the classroom will use rapid antigen testing to monitor for coronavirus transmission.
Testing requirements have also been tweaked to minimise movement in the hotspot suburbs where the virus is spreading most rapidly.
All essential workers leaving Canterbury-Bankstown will need to be tested every three days.
In Fairfield and Cumberland, only aged care and healthcare workers will have to follow the same rules.
The state government meanwhile has announced the JobSaver program will be boosted for businesses with an annual turnover of between $750,000 and $250million if they have had a revenue decline of 30 per cent or more.
Businesses that maintain how many staff they employee can now receive between $1,500 and $100,000 per week, up from $10,000.
Payments are based on 40 per cent of their weekly NSW payroll.
The decision to extend the lockdown was reportedly made in crunch crisis talks on Tuesday night after 172 new cases were announced earlier in the day.

A police officer speaks to a member of the public at Rushcutters Bay Park on Wednesday. All Greater Sydneysiders have been told they can now only travel 10km for essential shopping if what they need to buy is available locally
NSW Health flagged a further 49 venues in a late-night public health alert on Tuesday, including 13 supermarkets.
While the west and southwestern suburbs remains the epicentre of the highly contagious Indian Delta outbreak, the focus is now shifting to new areas that had so far been largely unaffected.
There were over a dozen exposure sites listed on the Northern Beaches, three on the North Shore, six in the Inner West and two in Sydney's Sutherland Shire.
The new venues of concern were announced amid concerns the state's 'gold standard' contact tracers are struggling to cope with the Delta strain.
As of Monday 14,000 close contacts were in isolation, double the number from three weeks earlier, with 7,500 of those linked to two sites.
A potential super-spreader event at Belrose Woolworths on the Northern Beaches has put 5,000 shoppers in isolation, while 2,495 close contacts so far have been linked to the Campsie Centre shopping mall in the city's south-west.
Among the venues exposed are four Coles, seven Woolworths, four Bunnings, a McDonalds, an organic bakery and even a skatepark.
It comes as Sydney recorded a new record high for this outbreak of 172 cases, bringing the total number of infections to since the outbreak began last month to 2,397 - with 79 new worrying mystery cases.

There are concerns the state's 'gold standard' contact tracers are struggling to cope with the Delta strain. Pictured are two women wearing activewear exercising in Sydney on Wednesday

Coles in Fairfield West (pictured) is just one of 13 supermarkets listed as coronavirus exposure sites on Tuesday night, as Sydney prepares for a four-week lockdown extension

Narrabeen Bunnings (pictured) on Sydney's Northern Beaches has been flagged as a Covid exposure site with infections slowly creeping their way out of the city's south-west epicentre
With such spiralling numbers there are now fears that the state's contact tracers are overwhelmed after a woman was told she was a close contact four days after the Campsie Shopping Centre was exposed to the virus for an 11-day stretch.
Of most concern to contact tracers is three venues where Covid transmission has occurred.
Anyone who visited the Madhouse Bakery in Chullora, Sydney's west, on July 21 between 8am to 6pm is considered a close contact and must immediately get tested and self isolate until they receive a negative result.

Gordon McDonalds on Sydney's Lower North Shore (pictured) was also issued a public health alert for Covid on Tuesday night in a bumper list of 49 new venues
It is the same story for anyone who attended Bankstown Westpac on July 19, 21, 22 and 23 and for the Flower Power Garden Centre in Terrey Hills on the Northern Beaches from 2pm to 3pm on July 19.
The Northern Beaches has largely been unaffected by Sydney's latest outbreak, which began in the eastern suburbs and has spread dramatically though the city's west.
But now Narrabeen Bunnings has been put on high alert, along with Warriewood Eleven11 and Dee Why Ampol.
Three venues in North Curl Curl were also flagged with Curl Curl Bacino Espresso and the North Curl Curl News agency all listed.

Gym junkies at Bondi Beach in Sydney (pictured) are approached by police officers on patrol on Tuesday, as 172 new cases were announced

Bundeena IGA in Sydney's Southerland Shire (pictured) was flagged as an exposure site after being visited by an infected person
Manly Vale Skatepark was hit with a public health warning, as well as Terrey Hills Golf Paradise.
The trendy Mosman Grain Organic Bakery on the Lower North Shore was also flagged, along with a McDonald's and Woolworths in Gordon.
Bundeena IGA and The Grocery Store in Miranda in Sydney's Southerland Shire were also issued public health alerts along with a string of venues in the inner-west.

Police officers at Sydney's Bondi Beach speak to gym junkies at the area's outdoor gym (pictured on Tuesday) with 20C temperatures tempting people out of their homes

Woolworths in Glenrose Village at Belrose (pictured) has been exposed to Covid over several days, with 5,000 customers and staff now in isolation
Greater Sydney, the Blue Mountains, Shoalhaven, Central Coast and Wollongong have been in lockdown since June 26, but coronavirus cases across the state have only grown - with more and more infectious in the community every day.
Countless people have been unable to work across multiple industries, as the NSW government struggles to contain the spread of the Indian Delta variant of the virus, especially in southwest Sydney.

Westpac on North Terrace in Bankstown (pictured) was exposed to coronavirus over four days with a worker testing positive. Alerts are out for visitors on July 19, 21, 22 and 23

Warning signs in the Lane Cove National Park on Tuesday (pictured) tell people not to gather or sit, with exposure sites now listed far and wide across the city
FIND THE LATEST EXPOSURE SITES NEAR YOU
It comes as new reports emerge that NSW Health contact tracers, one deemed Australia's 'gold standard', are now overwhelmed by the flood of new infections.
One woman who visited Campsie shopping Centre, which was exposed to the virus for 11 days, was informed she was a close contact four days after the alert was sent out - with not every Sydneysider guaranteed to be across the nightly social media alerts for exposed venues.
While contact tracers were quick to instruct staff members of the situation and that they need to self isolate, shoppers were left in the dark.
'We found the time lag from when my wife had attended the supermarket to when we were being notified a bit concerning, particularly as the information had been circulated on social media earlier, which we ignored,' Justin Leach, who is currently in isolation with his wife, told ABC's 7.30.
'So we were concerned at the delay.'

There are now fears NSW Health contact tracers are overwhelmed with the flood of new infections (pictured, an eerily quiet Milsons Point next to the Sydney Harbour Bridge on Tuesday)

The number of close contacts across NSW has skyrocketed over the past three weeks, doubling from 7,000 people in isolation on July 7, to 14,000 as of Monday, July 26 (pictured, a medical practice in Sydney Lane Cove is seen advertising Covid jabs)
At her daily press conference on Tuesday, Ms Berejiklian rolled out a new pilot program to make vaccines available at the state's chemists and pharmacies in order to rapidly increase the number of jabs to allow for an easing of economy-crippling lockdowns and job losses.
From this week, chemists can administer the AstraZeneca Covid-19 jab to all NSW residents over the age of 40 as part of a pilot program to boost vaccination rates across the state.
'My message to everybody is please come forward and get the vaccine,' Ms Berejiklian said.
'Not only are you protecting yourself but you're protecting those closest to you.'
Health Minister Brad Hazzard repeated calls for the federal government and other states and territories - which are relatively untouched by Covid - to give NSW more Pfizer vaccine doses to help fight Sydney's outbreak.
'We need more Pfizer,' he said.
'We are entirely dependent on the federal government supply of the vaccine. We know for a fact we will not have enough Pfizer in the next few weeks to do what we want to do.
'We would have liked some help from our state colleagues, but that hasn't happened.'
Meanwhile in Victoria and South Australia, millions were released from their respective lockdowns at 11.59pm on Tuesday as planned.
Victorian premier Daniel Andrews used the opportunity to take a swipe at his NSW counterpart, as he repeated calls for a 'ring of steel' around Sydney.
He also called for a city-wide curfew, as was implemented in Melbourne during its mammoth 112 day lockdown last year.
'You are not just making decisions for NSW, you are making decisions for the whole country,' Mr Andrews said on Tuesday.
'We have all lived it and we've all been touched by the tragedy of it, and it's on that basis and from that experience that we say we think these things, like a ring of steel around Sydney, and perhaps settings that are consistent across Sydney.
'I don't reckon any Victorian needs convincing that everything we did is worth trying in Sydney right now.'
He also tightened restrictions for those living in border towns with NSW.

Victorian premier Daniel Andrews (pictured) used the opportunity of his state leaving lockdwon to take a swipe at his NSW counterpart