The Scotsman

Wetherspoo­ns blasts Sturgeon’s ‘extremely onerous’ tiered system

- By SCOTT REID sreid@scotsman.com

Pubs giant JD Wetherspoo­n has blasted the Scottish Government’s “extremely onerous tier system” saying it was having a “serious effect on trade”.

The attack came as the group, which has 64 pubs trading in Scotland, revealed that firstquart­er sales had plunged 27.6 per cent. It warned that it will burn through some £14 million while 756 pubs are forced to close for a month as a result of the second English lockdown.

The company’s vocal founder and chairman Tim Martin said: “For any pub or restaurant company trading in different parts of the UK, and for customers generally, the constantly changing national and local regulation­s, combined with geographic­al areas moving from one tier to another in the different jurisdicti­ons, are baffling and confusing.

“The entire regulatory situation is a complete muddle. However, the initial regulation­s, following reop ening, intro - duced on July 4, were carefully thought through, followed thorough consultati­on, and were based on solid scientific foundation­s of social distancing.

“The benefits of the regulatory hyperactiv­ity since then, including the imposition of a curfew, are questionab­le.”

The group, whose Scottish pubs include the Caley Picture House in Edinburgh and Dunfermlin­e’s Guildhall & Linen Exchange, now in tier three of the Scottish Government’s restrictio­ns, said sales in October were “significan­tly lower” than during the summer months, following the imposition of new restrictio­ns.

It pointed to changes in the

tier categories across the UK, a 10pm curfew, a requiremen­t to order all food and drink at the table and the mandatory use of face masks when moving around inside pubs.

For the 15 weeks to November 8, like-for-like sales decreased by 27.6 per cent.

The group undertook a share placing in April that raised £137.7m, while £48.3m was raised through the Coronaviru­s Large Business Interrupti­on Loan Scheme in August. It had

£234m of liquidity on October 25 and noted that liquidity was “significan­tly higher, and current liabilitie­s are lower, than before the March lockdown”.

F r e e t r a d e a n a l y s t D a v i d Kimberley said: “It’s easy to be snooty about Tim Martin’s criticisms of government­al restrictio­ns, especially when he makes rather eccentric comments to support them.

“But when you’ve just failed to turn a profit for the first time in 36 years and are bleeding

money every day, it’s also understand­able why the Wetherspoo­n chairman is more than a little peeved.

“The latest lockdown is a disaster for the company. Pubs regularly generate a third of their yearly revenue in the last two months of the year. The only potential to stem these losses could have been some sort of takeaway service but it seems that Mr Martin’s company has no plans to do that.”

Martin added: “A particular anxiety in the hospitalit­y industry relates to the future timescale for the ending of ‘temporary’ regulation­s.

“Veterans of the industry will recall that the afternoon closing of pubs between about 3pm and 6pm was imposed in the First World War, to encourage munitions workers to return to their factories – but the requiremen­t for afternoon closing was only abolished in 1986.”

 ??  ?? 0 The vast JD Wetherspoo­n pub portfolio includes the Caley Picture House in Edinburgh
0 The vast JD Wetherspoo­n pub portfolio includes the Caley Picture House in Edinburgh

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