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Hospital Porter. SpaMedica - Sheffield. Mobile Patrol Officer - nights only. Securitas - Sheffield. Community Support Worker. Parity Care Ltd - Rotherham. Care Assistant. Senior Care Assistant. The confusion about what residents can and cannot do is widespread and extends to whether people can work and where they can shop. Matt Hancock announced non-essential shops will shut from today and schools will close from Thursday in Leicester. The streets of Leicester were almost empty this morning as residents responded to the warnings about a coronavirus surge.

The market remained boarded up in Leicester today, with lockdown set to be tightened up again to combat the spread. Gallowtree Gate in Leicester today as locals brace themselves for the new lockdown after a coronavirus surge. Government officials, local politicians and scientists are divided over whether Leicester is experiencing a real surge in cases or whether better testing is simply finding more of them where it wasn't before.

It is also not clear whether there are any characteristics of Leicester which make it more likely to see a surge in cases, or if random chance has meant the first 'second wave' is happening there. Experts say many of the risk factors in Leicester are the same in all major cities in England. The mayor of the city, Sir Peter Soulsby, said on BBC Radio 4 this morning that a report sent to him by the Government 'actually acknowledges that it's very likely that the increase in number of positives identified is a result of increased testing, and that actually there's perhaps nothing of any great significance in those results.

Director of Public Health for the city, Ivan Browne, said: 'Interestingly it [the surge in cases] is very much around the younger, working age population and predominantly towards the east part of our city. We started to see this level through our testing programme. I don't think at the moment that we are seeing a single source or a single smoking gun on this'. It was always likely that surges in cases would be seen in cities first. There are more people, raising the risk, and those people are more likely to live in densely populated areas and come into contact with strangers on a regular basis.

Dr Shaun Fitzgerald, from the University of Cambridge, said: 'There will be differences in the ease with which people can maintain physical distance between densely populated areas and rural environments — so it isn't surprising to me that we may see localised flare-ups, which in turn may need suppressing through delayed easing or temporary re-introduction of some constraints on some movements and activities. Leicester also has high levels of deprivation, which affects people's lives in ways that put them at risk of catching the virus.

Dr Simon Clarke, a microbiologist at the University of Reading, told MailOnline: 'In deprived areas people are more likely to have to go to work, less likely to be able to work from home, and more likely to use public transport. They can't distance themselves from others. The Samworth Brothers sandwich factory in the city reported over the weekend that it had diagnosed cases of Covid among its staff. Food processing factories are a higher transmission risk because cold environments allow the virus to survive for longer on hard surfaces and make people's airways more susceptible to infection.

Dr Clarke added that the types of work people do may increase their risk. If I don't go in, I don't get paid. I just don't see how it is going to work,' she said. Neighbour Lisa Jones, 51, is also in the Covid hotspot area and remains in lockdown. Am I allowed to go to the local shops for essentials because the shops I use are just outside the lockdown zone? Mrs Jones' daughter had a baby just before the initial lockdown period was introduced and visits have only just restarted. Now, they will have to end.

And now I cannot see him. It's devastating,' she said. On Tuesday, the border street was busy with children and neighbours in front of their homes doing jobs, chatting and riding bikes. However, at a point in the road a line of cobbles crosses the tarmac, which is the route of an old railway line that marks the boundary between the City of Leicester and the Market Harborough District, which is outside the lockdown area. The first house in the 'free world' of Market Harborough District belongs to David Blohm, 61, a retired builder. But I am really worried about Covid.

I think they released the lockdown too early.

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Meanwhile, Emil Gryglewski, 33, is glad to be on the right side of the lockdown line but is sympathetic to his neighbours who are not. Unfortunately, this is the line. I know it's not fair. People elsewhere in the city appeared to agree with the lockdown on Tuesday, but were angry it had been required. Accountant Vina Chaudhry, 34, told The Sun: 'I'm embarrassed to be born and to live in Leicester and I hope the Government makes an example of our city.

How can some people be so stupid and breach social distancing rules that are put in place to help keep us safe. The city has been packed and we are now being punished for those idiots not abiding by the rules. Shop worker David Welby, 46, added: 'Leicester hasn't complied and we're now all paying the price. But I have no problem obeying the lockdown and I'm glad it's extended.

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