The Jerusalem Post

Israeli gyms reopen after COVID-19 shutdown, but owners feel the burn

- • By HAGAY HACOHEN

Gyms across the country reopened on Sunday after weeks of being forced to shut down due to coronaviru­s health regulation­s.

But owners of gyms expressed concern that the decision to reopen the facilities would once again be rescinded.

“As I’m speaking with you, the Health Ministry is pushing to have us closed,” Associatio­n of Gyms and Studio Owners head Yaron Sela told The Jerusalem Post. “We’re on a roller-coaster ride.”

Sela, who owns Great Shape gyms, said that the associatio­n, along with Holmes Place CEO Keren Shtevy, suggested to the Health Ministry that they would impose upon themselves even stricter health measures – an upgraded Purple Badge – but nobody replied.

“We offered to increase the space each client trains in to 10 meters,” Shtevy explained, “or to close the gym to elderly clients during some hours to reduce risk.” A meeting between the Health Ministry and the associatio­n is set to take place on Wednesday.

Both Sela and Shtevy say they feel it would be better if gyms and popular sports were under the Health Ministry than the Culture and Sport Ministry because, Sela said, “at least they [the Health Ministry] look after their own.”

Sela told the Post that they had asked for one of two things from Culture and Sport Minister Hili Tropper: “to get us a meeting with the Finance Ministry to discuss aid, or with the Health Ministry to discuss why we are being closed – we got neither.”

Sela said that 1.3 million Israelis are paying customers of the health and fitness industry, which employs 110,000 workers and rents 3,000 sport centers across the country.

“This week we are going to have a heat wave,” Sela told the Post, “what does the Health Ministry say? Let people do sports outdoors. Who can train outside in such heat?”

Amir Glick, the head of Naim studios, told the Post during an interview in Tel Aviv that “we’ve been shut down for two months,” which led to a third of his customers not coming anymore.

Glick explains that, as jobs become scarce or uncertain, thousands of people are forced to leave Tel Aviv since they can’t pay rent. He thinks that “the way the government deals with us is very irresponsi­ble. Decisions are changed every moment, without reasons or a clear explanatio­n.”

In the health industry, Glick said, clients need to know if gyms and classes are available, requiring him to task workers with that task only.

Glick explains that Naim Studios are there to make fitness pleasant for all. “Some people are intimidate­d by gyms because of the loud music, or people who grunt as they lift heavy weights,” he said. “We don’t have any of that – our goal is to allow everybody the freedom to move.”

To answer demand during COVID-19, he opened online Naim at Home classes for NIS 59 per month.

In addition to the government’s lack of management, Glick said that the city of Tel Aviv also didn’t think of calling and asking if there’s anything it might be able to do to help.

“People need exercise during these times,” he said, “almost as much as they need air to breathe.”

If there is a silver lining to COVID-19, Sela said, it is that it unified a very diverse industry. The Associatio­n of Gyms and Studio Owners is the first time a united health and fitness group was formed in the country. “Coronaviru­s was able to unite us all,” Sela said.

In Yeruham, where Gymy opened in June, roughly 200 people who train are looking forward to working out again, manager Racheli Baruch told the Post.

She said that the local community is very diverse, with some people being more conservati­ve, so Gymy increased its women-only hours to four times a week in the morning. Men have men-only hours twice a week.

“Our gym has an important function because it’s the only one in town,” she said, “it is a fantastic, exciting feeling to be open again.”

 ?? (Maya Ben Natan/Naim studios) ?? ‘PEOPLE NEED exercise during these times almost as much as they need air’ Amir Glick, head of Naim studios, told the ‘Post.’
(Maya Ben Natan/Naim studios) ‘PEOPLE NEED exercise during these times almost as much as they need air’ Amir Glick, head of Naim studios, told the ‘Post.’

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