Originally posted by oddoneout
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To the best of my knowledge (and that of Declan Costello, who helped organise the research into singing's aerosol impact published last summer) there is no recent scientific research which supports increasing the restrictions on singing indoors whilst at the same time relaxing the restrictions on activities which are likely to encourage shouting or heavy breathing indoors (gyms, darts competitions, pubs, restaurants etc). The research indicated that singing does not produce significantly more aerosols than speaking/shouting at the same volume.
The most plausible explanation of the reverse ferret I have seen points out that the guidance for use of places of worship was amended on 14th May and capped the number of amateur singers in a church choir at six. Possibly someone in DCMS realised belatedly that this would lead to a situation where a church choir was subject to this cap, but a secular group could rehearse in the same church in greater numbers (subject to appropriate risk assessment and Covid safety protocols of course). So the guidance for performing arts was subsequently updated on 18th May in order to remove this inconsistency. Still leaves unexplained why the 'use of places of worship' guidance was tightened in this way, though.
As EnemyoftheStoat' says, the number six is entirely arbitrary in this context and betrays complete ignorance of the practicalities of choral singing.
Sadly, the official petition has fallen well short of the 100,000 signatures required to force a debate. My MP (Tory) hasn't even acknowledged my email on the subject, never mind following it up in any way.
Sorry, rant over...
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