Jamaica Gleaner

Businesses seek clarity on lockdown in England

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BUSINESS LEADERS urged the British government on Tuesday to give them at least a week’s notice over what restrictio­ns they will face when the lockdown in England expires in early December.

With the four-week lockdown due to end on December 2, businesses forced to shut during November are hoping they will be able to reopen to salvage something of what is for many the most important trading period of the year.

Under the lockdown in England, the hospitalit­y sector, such as pubs, restaurant­s, and entertainm­ent venues, have had to close. Stores selling items deemed nonessenti­al, such as books, clothing and sneakers, have also had to close, though they can provide online services.

The government has said it intends to revert to a localised approach when the lockdown ends, with areas still recording the most coronaviru­s infections facing the toughest restrictio­ns. However, it has been reluctant to say what restrictio­ns will be in place for any particular area.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock told lawmakers on Tuesday that “it’s too early to say exactly” what will happen on December 3.

Before the national lockdown started in England on November 5, there were three tiers of restrictio­ns. There’s growing speculatio­n that another level of tighter restrictio­ns will be introduced that potentiall­y keeps more sectors closed.

Ralph Findlay, CEO of the Marston’s, the brewery which operates 1,300 pubs in England, bemoaned a lack of communicat­ion f rom the government, and urged it to not make the same mistakes in the run-up to the lockdown’s end.

“I don’t know what restrictio­ns at this point I’ll be working to,” he told lawmakers on the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Select Committee. “We need at least a week in order to plan what tier we are going into.”

Like other parts of Europe, the four nations of the United Kingdom have reimposed varying degrees of restrictio­ns following a resurgence of the virus.

Scotland, which has retained a localised approach, went further Tuesday with the news that 11 of its 32 local authoritie­s, including Glasgow, will be placed i nto its highest tier of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. The restrictio­ns are set to run from Friday until December 11.

“The infection rate in all of these areas remains stubbornly and worryingly high,” First Minister Nicola Sturgeon told Scottish lawmakers.

There are some signs that the restrictio­ns in England are working. However, the number of virus-related hospitalis­ations and deaths are set to continue to rise as there is a lag between someone falling ill and requiring health care. The UK has Europe’s highest official virus-related death toll at over 52,000.

Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the British Retail Consortium, said the social and economic impact of the latest England lockdown has been “severe” and that many firms face going bust.

“The most important thing is that we have real clarity that that reopening goes ahead as planned,” she said.

So far this year, she said 13,800 stores have had to close and that number will rise sharply if businesses can’t open for Christmas, not least because the online and logistics capacity of most retailers is “close to capacity.”

Kate Nicholls, the chief executive for the UKHospital­ity lobby group, also noted that businesses in the sector are “far less resilient” now than they were going into the spring lockdown because many have already depleted their cash reserves.

She said that the sector has already shed 660,000 jobs this year and is now back in “intensive care” as it misses out on revenues during the “golden quarter” between Halloween and New Year’s Eve.

 ?? AP ?? A man wearing a face mask passes the Christmas tree in Covent Garden Piazza, as England continues a four-week national lockdown to curb the spread of coronaviru­s, in London, Tuesday, November 17, 2020.
AP A man wearing a face mask passes the Christmas tree in Covent Garden Piazza, as England continues a four-week national lockdown to curb the spread of coronaviru­s, in London, Tuesday, November 17, 2020.

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