Victoria has recorded no new local or internationally acquired COVID-19 cases as the state’s residents begin the first weekend since the end of their third lockdown.
The welcome news comes after more than 17,700 tests were conducted.
Just 25 active cases remain in the state.
A family of three on Thursday tested positive, more than a week after two of them stayed at the Holiday Inn at Melbourne Airport.
Health Minister Martin Foley on Friday confirmed one of the parents and child stayed at the quarantine hotel after returning from overseas in early February.
The whole family began isolating at home on February 7, after it was revealed a staff member at the hotel contracted the virus.
A total of 22 cases have been traced back to another family of three staying on the third floor of the Holiday Inn at the same time. They had contracted the highly-infectious UK strain of the virus overseas.
Authorities believe the outbreak began when one of the family members used a nebuliser medical device that caused the virus to spread through the air.
Fears it would spread into the community led to a five-day “circuit-breaker” lockdown, which ended on Thursday.
The Pfizer vaccine is expected to be transported to Austin Health, Monash Health and Western Health hospitals around Victoria on Sunday morning, packed in dry ice, in readiness for the first vaccinations to begin.
Mr Foley said workers who are most likely to come into direct contact with people who could have coronavirus will be first in line for the jab.
This includes hotel quarantine workers, airport and port workers, high-risk frontline health staff and aged care staff and residents.
The federal government has allocated 12,000 doses of the vaccine to Victoria in the first week of the program.
About 59,000 doses are expected in the first four weeks.
Six other hospitals will also become vaccination hubs as more jabs become available. They are Albury-Wodonga Health, Ballarat Health, Barwon Health, Bendigo Health, Goulburn Valley Health and Latrobe Health.
-with AAP
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