Business Day

The lights will go out in some movie houses

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The idea that doing business around the world will change completely after the Covid-19 pandemic ends is probably an exaggerati­on. People are creatures of habit and their desires need to be met.

We will still frequent restaurant­s, clubs and live-music events. However, many businesses that were struggling before the pandemic have had their world turned upside down.

One such business that could emerge with many bruises is the cinema. Movie houses have seen their revenues fall over the past few years as people have opted to use the money they would normally spend on one ticket on a month’s subscripti­on to a streaming service.

Dave Rice, the COO of Redefine Properties, the secondlarg­est SA listed property group, said tenants that provide entertainm­ent to visitors at its malls are in for nine months to a year of pain. Cinema chains may close some branches.

Redefine is communicat­ing with each tenant and doing its best to avoid new vacancies. Rice said a lot of attention is being paid to restaurant­s, which cannot trade during lockdown and will be unable to reopen for months because of social distancing regulation­s.

But no matter what the landlords try, there are likely to be tenant failures at some of SA’s malls. The government, businesses, the ultrarich and civil society have pledged money to save small businesses but not every business has a viable future and the administra­tion of getting cash to businesses in dire straits will be slow.

AMCU

The labour court case brought by the Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union (Amcu) offered an interestin­g insight into the relationsh­ip the union has with the regulator. Admittedly, the officials from Amcu and the department of mineral resources & energy were not the ones facing off, but the arguments between their legal representa­tives were telling.

Amcu’s aim was to get the health and safety conditions under which mineworker­s return to their jobs tightened as the industry moves to 50% capacity under lockdown.

Amcu’s lawyer, Alan Dodson, said the union, which represents 100,000 out of 450,000 mineworker­s, had repeatedly tried to communicat­e with the department, only to be ignored, apart from one letter in reply.

Dodson said Amcu had to maintain a working relationsh­ip with the Minerals Council SA —a body representi­ng mining companies — and so there was no demand from the union that it pay towards the cost of the proceeding­s. However, Amcu expected the state to pay, primarily because the union had called in five experts to bolster its case and their affidavits had come at a cost, while benefiting everyone in the industry.

Mark Wesley, the department’s legal representa­tive, took off his metaphoric­al boxing gloves and landed some powerful punches in return. He depicted the union as trying to set the agenda at the expense of everyone else, and that far from being co-operative, it wanted things done its own way.

There is no love lost between Amcu and the department. It’s something minister Gwede Mantashe, director-general Thabo Mokoena and other officials need to rectify. Having two such important players at odds with each other does nobody any good.

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