Police expect a "greater number of businesses to be trading" under alert level 3 - and officers will focus their attentions on deliberate rulebreakers, says Police Commissioner Andrew Coster.
The Government will this week provide much-anticipated details on what New Zealand can expect when the country goes back into alert level 3, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says.
And she appears determined to avoid the messy, conflicting statements that left many Kiwis confused when the country went into lockdown almost three weeks ago.
Ardern told Newstalk ZB's Mike Hosking today that the Government was working with the retail and hospitality sectors - and would do so with primary industries as well - on what levels 3 and 2 would look like.
Coster told Hosking that while details of alert level 3 were still being worked through, "we would expect to see a greater number of businesses trading".
He acknowledged this would lead to more workers travelling on the roads, and police attention would be focused on people clearly breaking the rules, such as big gatherings. "Businesses will also have some conditions on how they are expected to trade."
Ardern rejected any suggestion the Government should ease the lockdown early.
"Just remember, one case can lead to a massive outbreak. What matters is not just the numbers but what they tell us," she told Hosking.
"If we have cases where we don't know where they came from, we have to make sure there's no iceberg underneath."
She did not, she said, want to waste the good work of New Zealanders of the past three weeks of lockdown.
Ardern said the Government would be providing some guidance around what alert level 3 and 2 would look like this Thursday.
Cabinet will next week decide whether New Zealand will drop to alert level 3 on, or about, Thursday next week (10 days' time).
New Zealand was at alert level 3 for just a couple of days before going into alert level 4 some 20 days ago.
The level three guidance included restrictions on travelling, public gatherings and the closure of affected educational facilities.
Specifically, it said alert level 3 was designed for a scenario where there was "heightened risk the disease was not contained".
It said travel in areas of community transmission was limited, public venues and affected educational facilities would be closed, mass gatherings were cancelled, alternative ways of working were required and some non-essential businesses would be closed.
But coming back down from alert level 4, however, will be different.
Ardern said the Government would provide clarity around what alert level 3 looks like to businesses, for transport, for health and for recreation and education.
She said the Government would provide "the principles of what we expect to see within different environments and what can and cannot occur, and then examples".
"We will be providing as much detail as possible for businesses to know and understand whether they can, or cannot, open and if they can, what is expected of them."
Ardern told Hosking today the Government would also unveil this week more assistance for small to medium enterprises.
The wage subsidy scheme was one step but the Government recognised there were many other fixed costs for these businesses, including commercial rent, she said.
Ardern also confirmed discussions were under way at Cabinet for assistance for New Zealand media firms, who have been hit by a big drop in advertising revenue.
She did not go into details but said the pandemic had shown the importance of a media industry that provided trusted news and information. "We need to make sure they [media firms] are also viable post coronavirus."
The Treasury will today unveil a projection of the country's unemployment rate, which is expected to show the jobless number has climbed into the double digits.
The announcements come as Director-General of Health Ashley Bloomfield confirmed yesterday a fifth person had died as a result of Covid-19.
The man, in his 80s, was a resident of the Rosewood Rest Home in Christchurch. Ardern said that the fifth Covid-19 death serves as a reminder for New Zealand as to "why we are doing what we are doing".
Ardern said that because of people's collective efforts to stamp out Covid-19, New Zealand was in a position that many other countries were not.
The death toll in the UK has surpassed 10,000 – and it's double that in the US.
After yesterday's briefing and while answering questions on a live video, Bloomfield revealed one measure which might change in alert level 3 – the rules preventing people from being with dying family members.
"I can say this is something we are looking at and [it] will certainly be something we will be wanting to give advice about, especially as part of a step down to level 3 restrictions."
Today, the Treasury will unveil a raft of important economic projections, including the unemployment rate, the expected level of GDP growth going forward and the ability for the economy to recover.
Treasury Secretary Caralee McLiesh has previously said New Zealand's unemployment rate could likely head "well into the double digits".
Tomorrow, Finance Minister Grant Robertson will outline new measures to assist businesses during the lockdown, as well as the Government's "revised approach to the Budget," which is still due to be delivered on May 14.
In the meantime, Ardern continues to urge New Zealanders to stay at home and to stay within their bubbles.
"Week three may in fact be the hardest, we're coming around the bend but can't quite see the finish line," Ardern said.
"As the Minister for Sport recently said to me, we can't squander a strong half-time lead by letting up or getting overconfident."
And she had a message for those letting the side down by breaking the lockdown rules.
"It would take one case amongst you to have an outbreak that could lead to dozens of infections and possibly death."