Kuwait Times

Calling cooks and cleaners: Greece tourism hit by staff shortages

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Chryssa Vertakisʼs three-star Crete hotel is nearly booked up this summer, but her guests will have to eat elsewhere because her kitchen has no chef, and no cooks. Like hotel owners across the country, sheʼs facing acute staff shortages after two years of pandemic restrictio­ns that have seen droves of hospitalit­y workers seek work elsewhere. The key industry-which provides a quarter of Greeceʼs national income-relies largely on foreign staff to work as waiters, cleaners, busboys and cooks.

Many Bulgarians working as cleaners in Vertakisʼs hotel Alexia Beach went home during last yearʼs lockdown, and did not return, she told AFP. Greeks have also sought jobs in other sectors in response to COVID-shortened seasons that compounded long-existing grievances over working hours and low pay. “Seasonal employees cannot support their families on three and four months of work (per year),” Nikos Kokolakis, chairman of hotel workers in Creteʼs capital Iraklio, told state TV ERT on Wednesday. The union of Greek restaurant workers also says itʼs no surprise eligible workers steer clear of an industry where some operators “demand 10 to 12 hours of work without a day off, offering barely 700 euros ($740) per month.”

ʻQuality tourism in dangerʼ

Andreas Andreadis, honorary chairman of the associatio­n of Greek tourism enterprise­s (SETE), has warned that Greeceʼs travel industry is currently short of over 50,000 mainly kitchen and service staff. “Our quality tourism is in danger,” he tweeted earlier this month. The shortage threatens to stymie a positive start to the season, helped along by Greeceʼs decision to open up in March, two months earlier than in 2021.

In a bid to further boost visitor numbers, the government in February scrapped mandatory screening tests for travelers who hold a European vaccinatio­n certificat­e. And vaccine passes will no longer be required in restaurant­s, bars and shops from May 1, while mandatory masks indoors will be scrapped from June 1. Vertakis said the loosening of restrictio­ns had raised hopes in the industry of a return to 2019 levels, when 33 million tourists had visited.

“But without staff to accommodat­e this many people, it will be a problem,” she said. Nektarios Seremetis, who manages the restaurant­s and bars at the four-star Thalassa Beach Resort down the same coast, is three waiters short. “Those who worked for us in 2019 left and found jobs in Cyprus or Italy, where salaries are higher,” he said.

Tourism Minister Vassilis Kikilias last month suggested some of these vacancies could be filled from among the over 22,000 refugees from Ukraine who have fled to Greece since Russiaʼs invasion in February. Seremetis is not opposed to the idea, provided the refugees can speak English. But few Ukrainians have so far travelled to Crete, he said.

ʻWe canʼt do betterʼ

The war has also dented tourist numbers to Greece. The conflict has meant the loss of some 600,000 Russians and 240,000 Ukrainians who have cancelled reservatio­ns, Lyssandros Tsilidis, head of the Federation of Travel Agencies of Greece, told AFP earlier this month. At the Chryssi Akti hotel in Crete, Alexandros Pantelakak­is has mostly resigned himself to minding the parasols and lounge chairs on his own this season.

Pantelakak­is said many Greeks, including the man normally helping him out on the beach, did not receive enough state support to cope through two pandemic-shortened work seasons. “They hadnʼt made enough social insurance payments these past two years to earn unemployme­nt benefits,” Pantelakak­is said. “So when the tourism season (in 2020 and 2021) was cut short by the pandemic, many had to find jobs elsewhere,” he said.—AFP

 ?? ?? In this file photo tourists and locals sit at a restaurant cafe in the old town of Chania on Crete Island as the tourist season has started on the island. — AFP photos
In this file photo tourists and locals sit at a restaurant cafe in the old town of Chania on Crete Island as the tourist season has started on the island. — AFP photos
 ?? ?? In this file photo tourists sit at a restaurant in the old town of Chania on Crete Island as the tourist season has started on the island. — AFP photos
In this file photo tourists sit at a restaurant in the old town of Chania on Crete Island as the tourist season has started on the island. — AFP photos
 ?? ?? In this file photo tourists disembark after a boat ride in the old town of Chania on Crete Island as the tourist season has started on the island.
In this file photo tourists disembark after a boat ride in the old town of Chania on Crete Island as the tourist season has started on the island.

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