Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

GOOD LUCK WITH A SMALL BUSINESS RIGHT NOW

Pandemic hits keep coming for Gold Coast operators as those running south now nervously eye the start of looming light rail constructi­on – but where’s the support?

- PETER GLEESON peter.gleeson@news.com.au

IN these times of pandemic, who’d want to be a smallbusin­ess owner, maybe running a cafe or restaurant, these days?

Worse, who would want to be a business operator located between the Broadbeach and Burleigh Heads stretch with the light rail extension about to begin?

If the pandemic doesn’t get you, the light rail surely will. Progress stops for nobody and the light rail extension is a nobrainer.

There’s no doubt the G has well and truly hit the right spot when it comes to making the city a better place to live and play.

It is a 21st century transporta­tion blockbuste­r that is in tune with the Gold Coast’s desire to be a worldclass city, linking Helensvale to Broadbeach, and now, ultimately, the Coolangatt­a Airport.

In fact, my assessment is it just might be the most important piece of transport infrastruc­ture since the M1 was commission­ed back in 1996.

Stage 3 planning is well under way, for a 6.7km extension from Broadbeach to Burleigh with eight new stations including Mermaid Beach, Mermaid Beach South, Nobby Beach, Miami North, Miami, Christine Avenue, Second Avenue and Burleigh Heads.

It will create 670 jobs and is expected to cost at least $1bn, with a constructi­on time frame from September, taking it through to 2025.

Needless to say, the Gold Coast Highway between Broadbeach and Burleigh Heads will be a busy precinct over the next four years.

Traffic dislocatio­n is inevitable with such a big project. So too will there be business interrupti­on.

Now, one of the great benefits of having worked as a newspaper journalist on the Gold Coast, on and off for the past 30 years, is certain stories become seared into one’s memory. For example, when the Robina Town Centre was first built 25 years ago, it took at least five years before businesses became establishe­d and locals and visitors started using it properly.

From 1996 to 2001, many fledgling businesses went broke at Robina, and there were reports of suicides as struggling small businesspe­ople couldn’t make a living.

Look at it now. Robina Town Centre is one of the busiest shopping centres in the country and the ancillary services, particular­ly medical and light industry, are extraordin­ary.

The same despondenc­y applied for many businesses affected by the constructi­on of the first and second stages of the light rail project.

Those businesses on the Helensvale to Southport, and then the Southport to Broadbeach routes, were significan­tly affected.

Some reported turnover losses of 90 per cent. Many shut their doors and never reopened.

There were varying reports of compensati­on.

Some people said they were properly compensate­d for loss of business, others merely shrugged their shoulders and closed down, frustratin­gly moving to another suburb or city.

The lesson is clear.

Businesses in the Broadbeach to Burleigh region, particular­ly those along the coastal strip, must be given every opportunit­y to survive the four years of constructi­on.

We can’t just take the attitude that they will have to suck it up.

That did not work during previous stages of constructi­on.

Small business is the engine room of the Gold Coast economy. There are more small-to-medium-sized businesses on the Gold Coast, per capita, than anywhere in the country.

With the Covid-19 pandemic wreaking havoc with lockdowns and border closures sending many businesses to the wall, it is essential the three tiers of government look after these people during the constructi­on phase of Stage 3.

The pandemic has proven one thing. The Palaszczuk government doesn’t give a fig about the impact of snap lockdowns on businesses that rely on tourism.

The lack of rescue packages for tourism operators since the latest lockdown is appalling. As Business Council boss Jennifer Westacott said this week, it is time to start quoting Covid numbers on

hospitalis­ations, not those who have contracted the virus.

In the UK, where the vaccinatio­n rate is more than 60 per cent, last week’s sevenday average of new cases was 23,115 people a day. They have had 128,000 deaths.

Australia has had less than 1000 deaths. Wimbledon goes ahead without spectators wearing masks. We close down the state for three days with four new cases. Madness.

Queensland needs to live with the virus.

It is killing our economy, especially the accommodat­ion providers.

Maybe a smart class-action lawyer needs to start testing the water.

Hundreds of businesses that have gone broke because of these draconian lockdowns may well have a strong legal case.

It’s worth a shot.

If the pandemic doesn’t get you, the light rail surely will

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 ??  ?? An eerily quiet Surfers Paradise during last week’s three-day lockdown. Picture: Glenn Hampson
An eerily quiet Surfers Paradise during last week’s three-day lockdown. Picture: Glenn Hampson

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