Mercury (Hobart)

No-shows a no-go for restaurant­s

- CAMERON WHITELEY

A BELLERIVE restaurant owner has urged customers to honour bookings and give enough notice of cancellati­ons, saying no-shows have a harmful effect on the bottom line of hospitalit­y businesses.

Sarah Mundy, the owner of Gastown East on Cambridge Rd, said the importance of the issue was heightened due to gathering limits imposed due to coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

The business, which opened in 2018, had to close in late March, but was allowed to reopen and seat up to 10 patrons at a time.

Miss Mundy, who runs the eatery with fiance Kristian Farrow, said further easing of restrictio­ns would enable that number to increase in coming weeks.

She said while most customers did the right thing, the business had experience­d instances where groups arrived with fewer people than they had booked for.

This meant the restaurant could lose out on income because it may have had to turn people away due to the existing booking.

“I know people don’t do it on purpose and don’t mean to upset the flow of the restaurant,’’ she said.

“I acknowledg­e there are times when you don’t have any prior notice, but the majority of the time, if people do know in advance, any notice before they arrive is enough for us.”

Miss Mundy said the business had considered taking credit card details when bookings were made, but had decided against it due to the impact on older customers.

She said government grants for small businesses, the JobKeeper scheme and a supportive landlord had allowed the business to stay afloat during the coronaviru­s crisis.

“We’re really fortunate our business is communityb­ased. We have a lot of regulars that we see several times a week and we’re not relying on tourist trade,’’ she said.

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