Families and friends will shortly be able to pay their respects to loved ones in greater numbers, with numerical limits on funerals to be removed.
- Legal limit on numbers of mourners at funerals to be removed in England at Step 3 of the roadmap
- Venues such as places of worship to set limits based on individual capacity
- All organisers must continue to be Covid secure and follow social distancing rules
Families and friends will shortly be able to pay their respects to loved ones in greater numbers, with numerical limits on funerals to be removed.
After careful consideration, the legal limit of 30 mourners will be removed as part of Step 3 of the roadmap, to take place from 17 May at the earliest. As the Prime Minister has said, the current data does not suggest any need to alter the dates at which restrictions will next be eased.
Instead, the number of people who can attend a funeral will be determined by how many people the venue, such as the relevant place of worship or funeral home, can safely accommodate with social distancing. This includes both indoor and outdoor venues. Capacities of venues will vary, but many will allow significantly more than 30 people to attend.
Limits for other life or commemorative events at Step 3, such as weddings and wakes, are expected to remain as set out in the roadmap.
Following Step 2 on 12 April, hospital admissions and cases of severe illness are in line with modelling provided by scientific experts, both when the roadmap was first published and ahead of Step 2.
Boosted by a successful vaccination rollout, with over 48 million doses given, the public’s efforts to suppress the virus are working.
Communities Secretary Rt Hon Robert Jenrick MP said: "The British people have made huge sacrifices throughout the pandemic to protect the NHS and save lives, and nowhere is that more apparent than in the deeply painful restrictions on the numbers attending funerals. Losing a loved one has been incredibly hard during the pandemic and I am pleased we are now in a position, thanks to everyone’s continued efforts and the rollout of the vaccine, to remove these limits and allow more friends and family to come together and pay their respects. I look forward to working with faith leaders responsible for places of worship, and those who manage venues such as funeral homes, to introduce the new arrangements in a way that continues to keep people safe."
A representative from the Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale Conservative Association said: "People in Rochdale Borough who have lost loved ones and family members to Covid-19 have played an enormous part in our nation's recovery by observing this restriction at the most difficult of times. Their sacrifice has helped to protect others and whilst it has been upsetting that funerals had to be limited, we are pleased that that effort and sacrifice will mean that we can now look to lift the restrictions and that fewer people will be in the position of losing loved ones to this terrible virus."