Victoria has recorded three new locally acquired COVID-19 cases overnight, as authorities plan to further ease restrictions.
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The Health Department confirmed five new local COVID-19 cases were recorded in the 24 hours to Wednesday morning, two of which had already been announced.
The three new cases are all linked to known outbreaks, the department confirmed.
The two other cases, which were announced on Tuesday, are residents of the Kings Park Apartment Complex at Southbank, which has been locked down for 14 days after a total of six people who live there became infected.
Authorities believe transmission between the two cases occurred in a common area of the complex, which is home to about 200 residents.
COVID-19 Commander Jeroen Weimar said the men lived in separate apartments adjacent to those occupied by positive cases.
"Those two positive cases are connected to some communal areas that we are concerned about, thoroughfares within that particular complex," he told reporters.
The low-rise complex, which consists of about 100 townhouses, has now been listed as a Tier 1 exposure site from June 2 to June 14.
As a result, all residents in the building have been asked to self-isolate for the next 14 days.
It comes as Victorians are set to learn if restrictions are to be eased.
Melburnians are still living under onerous restrictions after emerging from lockdown last Thursday including a 25 kilometre travel limit and mask mandate.
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In recent weeks, the Victorian government has made a habit of announcing on Wednesdays whether regional Victoria and Melbourne would move to more relaxed rules.
Acting Premier James Merlino flagged last week city rules would likely move closer into line with regional Victoria, where two adults are currently permitted for home visits each day.
"That would mean the travel restriction, in terms of the 25km, that would go," he said at the time.
But Health Minister Martin Foley said the further potential easing of restrictions from just before midnight on Thursday remained a "day-by-day proposition".
Meanwhile, walk-in Pfizer vaccinations at Victoria's state-run hubs have been paused for the rest of the week in an attempt to preserve supply for already booked first and second doses.
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