NSW has recorded 20,324 new Covid-19 cases, 2,712 hospitalisations and 34 deaths, while Victoria saw 13,091 positive test results and 14 deaths. Both states have recorded lower infections than the previous day, with 20,148 new infections and 30 deaths in NSW, and 16,016 cases and 20 deaths in Victoria. There are 189 people in ICU in NSW, and 120 in Victoria. NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet confirmed on Saturday that half of those in intensive care are unvaccinated - adding that although cases numbers are still high, 'lockdowns are not the key'. He also revealed that students and teachers to be given two free rapid antigen tests every week in the state's return to school plan. The premier will provide an update at a press conference at 10am on Sunday, where he is also expected to extend a raft of Covid restrictions - including indoor mask mandates and rules in pubs and clubs. Restrictions on mask wearing, singing and dancing in hospitality venues, entertainment facilities and major recreation facilities were due to be lifted on January 27. Pictured: A woman walks along an almost empty street at Bondi Beach. NSW recorded 20,148 and 30 deaths on Saturday The NSW premier (pictured) will provide an update at a press conference at 10am on Sunday Face masks will be made mandatory for all teachers and high school students, but not for primary school children. Other measures include vaccine mandates for all teachers and staff as sport, music, assemblies and even school camping trips are given the green light to go ahead when children return to the class on February 1. The state government hopes to have delivered more than six million RATs to 3,000 public, private and religious schools across NSW by January 26 - even as the rest of Australia faces a supply shortage. The non-mandatory testing program is set to run for the first four weeks of first term before the regime is reviewed and resupplied. Teachers and children at day care centres will also be offered RAT kits for twice-weekly testing. Victorians who have not received their booster shot could soon be banned from dining in cafes and restaurants (pictured: a woman checking in to the Australian Open) Meanwhile, Victorians who have not received their booster shot could soon be banned from dining in cafes and restaurants - after the state recorded 16,016 new cases and 20 deaths on Saturday. The Department of Jobs, Precincts and Regions met with hospitality and retail groups on Friday to discuss bringing in several changes to protect staff and customers. QR code check-ins could also be ditched with health authorities using the app less as they scale back on contact tracing and shift their focus to high risk close contacts. NSW's Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant revealed on Friday that the 'underlying health conditions' that are most likely to account for the deaths of young and middle-aged people with Covid. Dr Chant said the State Coroner had reviewed the deaths of 28 people - all of them younger than 65 - who had died while infected with the virus between January 15 and 21. Of the 28, 24 had health issues that ranged from asthma and obesity to life-threatening illnesses including heart disease and diabetes. Ten had significant heart or valvular disease, six had chronic lung disease, six had kidney disease, two had significant rheumatological diseases and three had autoimmune diseases. However, a considerable number of patients were living with less commonly fatal conditions - with six suffering from obesity, two living with asthma and seven with diabetes. Dr Chant revealed half the victims were vaccinated, but 13 were not and one person had received only their first dose. Despite Friday being the state's deadliest day of the pandemic with 46 lives lost, Mr Perrottet said NSW was 'tracking better than our best case scenario' in terms of those in hospital and ICU. 'In respect of our intensive-care capacity, we currently have 209 people with COVID in our intensive-care units,' he said. 'That is once again tracking better than our best case scenario from the modelling that we released two weeks ago … that was at a height where we were expecting 270 on our best case scenario and 600 on our worst-case scenario.' All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility