The Free Press Journal

AfterHyatt­Regencysus­pendsops,hotelierss­endSOS togovt

- SULEKHA NAIR Mumbai

The closure of Hyatt Regency may bring the plight of hospitalit­y industry forcefully before the government, say hoteliers.

The hotel, located close to the Mumbai airport, is owned by Asian Hotels (West) Ltd.

Hyatt has come under spotlight and people are talking about it because it is a five star property. Almost 30 percent of hotels in the country are shut and of the 90 million employed by the sector, 30 percent have lost their livelihood­s, according to hoteliers. A staggering Rs 1.50 lakh crore revenue has been lost. But has it caught anyone’s attention, asked hoteliers.

“The situation is very grim. You may hear a few more hotels shutting down temporaril­y or for long,” said Dilip Datwani, a hotelier who termed himself ‘hotelier in distress’ . He shared that the industry had no business for the past year-and-a-half, ever since the pandemic struck and tourism, flights were impacted.

However, the situation would have been ‘tolerable’, he said, if the taxes being collected on idle properties (‘that were not functional due to pandemic orders from the government’) were waived off, Datwani said.

The taxes are collected on property, water, electricit­y and renewal of licenses. “Hoteliers had staff that was sitting idle and had to pay them. For a few months most of them could pay but with no revenues, they could not continue and were asked to go home,” said Gurbaxish Singh Kohli, Vice President, Federation of Hotel and Restaurant­s Associatio­n of India. Around 30 percent of hotels and restaurant­s that have shut pan India will not restart as they do not have the funds and no money to pay interest on bank loans taken. A restaurant starts making revenues after being in business for five years. The ones who have shut down are a decade old and some less than five. They are holding on to the properties as distress sales will do them in. But how long can they hold on, Kohli said.

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