Life in the Uusimaa Exclusion continues. The Uusimaa region, which includes the capital area and is home to about 1,7 million Finns (out of the total of 5,5 million) is the infection hotspot and has therefore been restricted from the rest of the country. Crossing the border is allowed for work, official business or "important personal reasons" which includes e.g. meetings between parents and children who live on different sides, but not meetings between adult couples.
Other than that we have no movement restrictions, but the government strongly recommends everybody to stay home except for completely necessary reasons. Schools are closed since 2,5 half weeks, and the closure was just extended until mid-May. Libraries, museums etc are also closed. The government wants to order restaurants and bars to close too, but it has proven surprisingly difficult to forbid private business from operating. Most of them have been closed for a while now but some are open as long as they can. The closure will likely take effect on Saturday, but food takeout will be allowed. Based on how difficult this is despite the obvious need, I don't really expect there will be forced closure of all non-essential businesses. But then I didn't expect any of this in February, so only time will tell!
Going out for a walk (or run, hike etc) is allowed, but keeping distance of at least 2 m is strongly recommended. This hasn't been a problem for us as we live in a suburban area and have a forest right around the corner. However a colleague of mine who lives in central Helsinki says it's difficult to go out for fresh air as there are so many people around it's hard to maintain the distance on the pedestrian lanes (at least we have pedestrian lanes everywhere!). Also the National Parks in the capital area and the best known nature spots have been so busy especially on weekends, that the state agency responsible for them keeps sending notifications for people to go to their nearby forests because it's not possible to keep the distance in the popular parts of the National Parks.
We have no need to cross the border from Uusimaa, but it is really weird to think there is an internal border in Finland. Must be even weirder for the conscripts who are helping police at the checkpoints! We don't have a militia-type organisation, just the civilian police force and then the Defence Forces i.e. the Finnish Armed Forces. The controlling of crossing traffic is a police operation, but for reasons of manpower Defence Forces are helping. A handful of people have been fined for illegal crossing. My parents live outside of the Zone but my brother lives in the same city (well, actually you know it's Joensuu) so we not too worried about them. We wouldn't be allowed to visit anyways. People over 70 are again strongly recommended to consign themselves into self-isolation.
Stores are mostly back to normal. Delivery service and collect-packed-groceries services are inundated so my husband goes to the store a couple of times a week. The rest of us stay home, luckily we have enough room so that each one can be alone in one room. We have two teenagers studying from home, and two adults working. Teenagers are managing surprisingly well, as is husband, I have trouble concentrating but I'm more or less waddling through.
Finland as a whole has about 1500 confirmed cases, about 150 people hospitalized and 19 deaths. No hospitals are full yet, and the fairly strict measures are of course intended to keep the situation within the realms of capacity of the health services. I'm not really scared but I am mighty worried. There is a huge surge of lay-offs (suspension of employment, or temporary termination) going on and while this hasn't affected either mine or my husband's companies at least yet, it has society-wide repercussions. Especially as it's now starting to look like the unemployment services will not be able to cope with the flood and the benefits may be delayed for several months.