Mercury (Hobart)

Cities rocked by closures

- HELEN KEMPTON TIM MARTAIN

A TASMANIAN celebrity chef’s restaurant and a business open for more than a century are among the latest highprofil­e coronaviru­s closures.

After more than 130 years of business in Launceston, C. H. Smith Marine will close at the end of August, while MasterChef favourite Ben Milbourne has decided he cannot continue to operate his Devonport restaurant.

Robin Anderson has been co-owner of the popular marine supplies store, on Wellington

St, for nine years, but said there was too much financial uncertaint­y to continue.

The store will close at the end of its lease.

“A lot has changed in recent years, with big chains like BCF and Anaconda coming in and not as many commercial fishermen coming in,” she said. “COVID-19 affected us in the early stages too, since people weren’t able to go fishing or boating, so that didn’t help.”

C. H. Smith first opened in Launceston in 1884. The refurbishe­d original C. H. Smith building on Charles St now houses Service Tasmania.

Tasmanian Chamber of Commerce and Industry CEO Michael Bailey said local businesses were facing an economic crisis and the sector would need strong leadership.

“The Business Outlook forecasts Tasmania will spend most of the new financial year in recession and unemployme­nt will spike,” he said.

“The TCCI is calling for a three step plan — help businesses to reopen and stay open, invest in skills and invest in infrastruc­ture.

“The government will also need to look at other measures, such as payroll tax and other significan­t input costs that it controls, like power bills.”

Mr Milbourne’s restaurant Charlotte Jack, named after his children, was in the Devonport City Council’s Providore Place, which is part of stage one of its Living City project.

Those who dined at Charlotte

Jack posted food reviews, but Milbourne said a lack of foot traffic in the area, followed by COVID-19 trading restrictio­ns and an upcoming annual rent of $52,000 a year, combined to make it unviable.

“There is just no foot traffic around Providore Place and, to be honest, the building has been a white elephant,” Mr Milbourne said.

“You could go to Devonport and navigate yourself around the city without ever going through that area. It just did not become the city centrepiec­e I was told it would be.”

He said the council had promised markets and other events would be staged regularly to draw people to the area but, other than a Sunday market, that did not happen.

Devonport Mayor Annette Rockliff said the council did not believe Providore Place had become a “white elephant” and she expected to see it evolve over time with the broader market.

Meanwhile, Mr Milbourne’s production company Cultivate is doing well with a new show called Award Winning Tasmania, co-hosted on television by Henry Terry of My Kitchen Rules fame.

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