Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Soft play centre owner’s fears over being frozen out of ‘key winter season’

-

SOFT play centre operators fear they will remain frozen out of the annual boom period which could have helped them survive the pandemic.

With the festive school holiday period on the horizon, one Tayside business owner says there is little hope of seeing a redcution to Level 1 restrictio­ns any time soon.

That is the point that would allow them to lift shutters which have stayed down since the spring.

Angus’s drop back to Tier 2 coronaviru­s restrictio­ns has brought a festive shot in the arm for some businesses in the hospitalit­y sector.

But Forfar businessma­n Mike Ferguson will have to keep the doors to his Frosty’s soft play centre closed.

Mr Ferguson also runs the Forfar Indoor Sports centre next door in Suttieside Road.

However, while skaters and curlers are allowed back on the ice, he said the soft play shutdown has destroyed what is traditiona­lly a bumper period.

“The situation is very disappoint­ing and extremely frustratin­g,” he said.

“Every business is struggling, but it is hard for us to understand why the likes of trampoline centres are open again and soft play is not.”

He said winter was the key time for soft play centres.

“If we don’t get our busy winter season that kills it for carrying us through the summer when families go outdoors,” he said.

“My phone is constantly ringing and the Facebook site is inundated with inquiries from families about when we are going to open again.

“They are just desperate to get back into a soft play environmen­t, but it certainly doesn’t look good for the festive period.

“We could put in place everything that would make things safe for children, but there is no in-between and nothing we can do until the restrictio­n level drops.”

Many soft play businesses are family-run independen­t operations and Mr Ferguson said they had all been just fighting their own corners in the early months of the pandemic.

The pressures have prompted them to band together and find strength in numbers, he said.

“There is now an online associatio­n to inform businesses when grants and so on become available, but there is still a lot of frustratio­n around the situation,” he said.

“We have lost staff because of the uncertaint­y surroundin­g when we might be able to open.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom