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A COVID-19 cluster at an inner west aged care facility has grown to 20 cases, as it is revealed fewer than a third of aged care workers in the state are fully vaccinated.

NSW reported 207 new local coronavirus cases on Monday, 102 of which had not yet been linked to known cases.

Summer Hill’s Wyoming aged care facility as residents were moved to hospital on Monday.Credit:Louie Douvis

The cluster at the Wyoming aged care facility at Summer Hill grew by six cases on Monday to 18 residents and two staff, the largest cluster seen at an aged care facility this year.

Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt confirmed the facility had been attended by an assistant in nursing who worked across three sites before testing positive to COVID-19.

He said the nurse, who was contracted by an agency, was exempt from a ban on staff working across aged care facilities which came into force when the federal government activated its “single site funding support” on June 23 in response to rising cases in Sydney.

“The surge workforce capacity has always been [exempt],” he said, adding the “very nature” of agency staff was to provide assistance across sites when required.

According to an ongoing survey of aged care providers by the federal government, 56 per cent of workers in NSW report having received at least a first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. Thirty-two per cent say they have been fully vaccinated.

Mr Hunt said 58 per cent of staff at Wyoming had received their first dose and an additional 6 per cent were fully vaccinated.

“It is a salient lesson; I urge anyone in aged care to take up vaccination,” NSW Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant said of the situation.

Residents on the top floor of the facility, including the 18 cases and 14 who have tested negative, have been transferred to local hospitals.

NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard said 10 of the facility’s 65 residents were not vaccinated, including seven who had tested positive.

Mr Hunt said four clinics had visited the facility to provide vaccination.

“It is a strong reminder those who are friends and family of loved ones in aged care that we should encourage everybody to accept vaccination,” he said.

The facility’s operator, Hardi Aged Care, said it was organising another round of vaccinations for residents who had previously declined.

After Mr Hazzard told reporters transmission could have occurred at a Christmas in July party held at the facility during Greater Sydney’s lockdown, the operator denied the event was irresponsible.

“A normal lunch was held for our residents but with Christmas decorations and some carols played to them on our speaker,” a spokesperson said.

At the end of last week, federal government data showed there were staff cases at seven aged care facilities, including Wyoming, Japara Corymbia at Belrose, The Palms at Kirrawee, Rosemore at Belmore, Bankstown Terrace Care, Milford House at Randwick and Summitcare Baulkham Hills. Only Summitcare and Wyoming have also reported infections in residents.

A record 117,009 coronavirus tests were processed during the 24 hours to 8pm Sunday.

At least 72 of Monday’s 207 cases were in the community while infectious, as health authorities warned the virus was continuing to spread in workplaces and households.

Dr Chant singled out the freight industry as a source of a number of cases. She said cases had also been detected in food processing workplaces but these had not resulted in large numbers due to their COVIDSafe plans.

Premier Gladys Berejiklian urged all Sydneysiders to come forward for vaccination, adding that younger adults were the government’s particular focus.

“It’s people in their 20s, 30s and 40s that are most mobile, that are between two generations or within three generations that are both getting the virus and spreading the virus,” she said.

A man in his 90s from south-west Sydney died at Liverpool Hospital on Sunday. He was the 15th COVID-19 death in Sydney’s outbreak.

The man, who was being treated in the hospital’s aged care ward, had received one dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine, Dr Chant said.

There are 232 cases in NSW’s hospitals, including 54 people in intensive care. Twenty-five are ventilated.

NSW Health added supermarkets in Ashfield, Baulkham Hills, Castle Hill, Ryde and Thornleigh, McDonald’s stores at Castle Hill and Warriewood to its list of exposure sites on Monday night, as well as Kogarah Australia Post and bus services from Pendle Hill to Girraween and Parramatta Station to Castle Hill.

St Bernadette’s Castle Hill, in the Hills District, and Strathfield South Public School, in the inner west, both shut for in-person learning on Monday after COVID-19 exposures in the community.

Queensland reported 13 new COVID-19 cases on Monday, bringing the state’s cluster to 31. Lockdown measures were extended in 11 affected local government area’s until 4pm Sunday.

There were two new local cases reported in Victoria on Monday. Both were linked to known cases and in quarantine.

with Lucy Carroll

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