The Scotsman

W hats a pp revelation­s a‘ real slap’ for food and drink industry

- Alistair Grant

The content of Whatsapp messages released as part of the UK C ovid inquiry’ s hearing sin scotland has felt like a“real slap” for hospitalit­y businesses, an industry leader has said.

Stephen Montgomery, director of the Scottish Hospitalit­y Group, said the revelation­s had "absolutely" reinforced some of the concerns businesses had at the time.

It comes after Jason Leitch, Scotland’s national clinical director, was forced to deny advising First Minister Humza Yousaf of a “work around” to mask rules during the pandemic.

Meanwhile, critics said messages between Nicola Sturgeon and Liz Lloyd, her former chief of staff, suggested that hospitalit­y rules were “seemingly made up at random”.

Mr Montgomery, who lobbied on behalf of the hospitalit­y industry during the Covid crisis, said: "I'm ex-army, and our thing was always preparatio­n and planning before execution.

"In many, many instances it shows now, after the evidence, in scotland that it was execution without any planning and preparatio­n,and just left for the businesses to deal with the fallout."

In a message exchange between Ms Sturgeon and Ms Lloyd in October 2020, which was submitted to the inquiry by the adviser, the former first minister admitted she was having a“crisis of decision-making” over hospitalit­y and added “it’s all so random” when discussing restrictio­ns on restaurant­s.

Mr Montgomery said: "If she thought it was random, how did the government think that we felt?”

In a separate exchange from November 2021, Mr Yousaf – then serving as health secretary – asked Prof Leitch about mask rules ahead of an event he was attending.

“I know sitting at the table I don’ t need my mask ,” mr yo us af said in the partially redacted message .“if i’ m standing talking to folk need my mask on (sic)?”

Responding, the national clinical director said :“Officially yes. But literally no one does. Have a drink in your hands at ALL times. Then you’re exempt. So if someone comes over and you stand, lift your drink.”

Mr Montgomery told The Scotsman: “That was a real slap to us, because we had people ringing us saying ‘I’m just going to build a shelf outside our toilets, so people can walk around with a drink in their hand, walk into the toilet, use the toilet and come back out and walk back to their table with a drink in their hand and they’re exempt from wearing masks’.

“We were continuall­y saying ‘don't do that, because that's flouting the law’.”

The hospitalit­y boss added: “If the health secretary is querying his own policy on health, how was it supposed to be for the hospitalit­y industry?”

The UK Covid Inquiry sat in Edinburgh for three weeks, during which it heard evidence from senior politician­s, civil servants and experts.

Ms Sturgeon, who fought back tears during parts of her evidence, has been strongly criticised by campaigner­s for deleted her own Covid Whatsapps.

She said she rarely used the a pp and had deleted her messagesin­line with official advice.

It was confirmed on Sunday that Scotland’s informatio­n commission­er david hamilton was launching an investigat­ion into the Scottish Government’s use of Whatsapp and informal messages.

Mr Hamilton said evidence revealed at the inquiry raised “significan­t practice concerns” around the retention of informal communicat­ions from the pandemic.

Retailers have meanwhile urged Scottish ministers to shelve considerat­ions for a“cash grab” tax on grocery stores selling alcohol or tobacco.

The Scottish Government’s 2024/25 Budget documents revealed plans to “explore” a new business rate surtax on retail premises to help plug the gap in public finances.

Retail leaders previously warned the proposals could lead to stores needing to raise an additional £1 billion in sales each year to cover the cost, coupledwit­h continued pressure on the industry following the pandemic.

The tax proposals – similar to the public health supplement introduced in 2012 – would see retailers pay extra if they sold alcohol or tobacco from their premises.

The previous scheme raised £95 million before it ended in 2015. Now, the Union of Shop, Distributi­ve and allied workers (Usdaw) union has joined forced with the Scottish Retail Consortium(src) to demand ministers reject the plans.

The union said the move would bea“retro grade step” that would break pledges set out in the Scottish Government’s New Deal for Business framework.

Tracy Gilbert, Usdaw Scotland’s regional secretary, said: “The Scottish Government should be making it as easy as possible for retailers to invest and create good jobs in scotland, not making it more difficult with the threat of a costly new business rate surtax.

“This arbitrary move could exacerbate the challenges facing retai.”

David lonsd ale, director of the Src, said :“usdaw’ s interventi­on shows that a growing range of voices from across Scotland’s retail industry are expressing serious doubts about the wisdom of introducin­g a new tax on food retailers.

“A new surtax would be a retrograde step and firmly as odds with the government’ s new deal for Business. Grocers already face a swathe of upcoming new regulation­s and have also been lumbered with huge costs as a result of the deposit return scheme farrago.

“Now they face an additional tax which even the scottish government admits is little more than a cash grab. We hope ministers take heed and shelve the surtax.”

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “This announceme­nt in the Scottish Budget signalled ministers’ intention to explore there introducti­on of a public health supplement in advance of the next Scottish budget. Representa­tives from the retail sector and other relevant stakeholde­rs will be consulted as part of that explorator­y work.”

Arbitrary move could exacerbate the challenges facing retail

 ?? PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN ?? Critics say messages between Nicola Sturgeon and Liz Lloyd, her former chief of staff, suggested that hospitalit­y rules were ‘seemingly made up at random’
PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN Critics say messages between Nicola Sturgeon and Liz Lloyd, her former chief of staff, suggested that hospitalit­y rules were ‘seemingly made up at random’

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