Eastern Eye (UK)

One-off grants to support virus-hit hospitalit­y sector

SUNAK SAYS PACKAGE WILL OFFSET LOSSES INCURRED IN FESTIVE SEASON

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BRITAIN on Tuesday (21) launched a £1 billion support package for Covid-hit businesses, as staff absences from rising cases began to bite in the run-up to Christmas.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak said some 200,000 firms would be eligible for one-off grants to offset losses from what is normally the busiest time of year.

Under the support announced on Tuesday, hospitalit­y and leisure firms in England will be eligible for grants of up to £6,000 for each of their premises, accounting for almost £700 million of the new package. The grants were equivalent to those provided to hospitalit­y businesses when they were fully closed earlier this year, the Treasury said.

Pubs and restaurant­s have seen Christmas parties and bookings cancelled because of the spread of the Omicron variant of the virus, hitting December trade by as much as 60 per cent. Sunak said the government recognised that businesses in the hospitalit­y and leisure sectors were facing “huge uncertaint­y at a crucial time”.

A fund to support cultural organisati­ons would be increased by £30m, while £100m would be provided to English local authoritie­s for business support measures and £150m to government­s in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

The ministry also said it would cover the cost of statutory sick pay for Covid-related absences, for up to two weeks per employee, for small and medium-sized employers across the UK.

Britain borrowed more than £300bn in the last financial year to help it offset the hit to the economy from coronaviru­s and the government’s lockdowns.

“Of course, I will always respond proportion­ately and appropriat­ely to the situation that we face, people can have confidence in that,” Sunak said when asked by a reporter if there would be more help for businesses in the event of further restrictio­ns.

Asked about the likelihood of more restrictio­ns, Sunak said the situation was too uncertain to know the path ahead.

“What the prime minister said is that we’re reviewing the data day by day, hour by hour, keeping the situation under constant review but can’t rule anything out,” he said.

Retailers have felt the chill from Omicron in December, as shoppers stayed at home to prevent catching the virus before Christmas, employers’ associatio­n the CBI said.

The government is banking on an ambitious campaign to get all adults in England

to have a booster jab of a Covid vaccine by the end of December to try to stop the spread of the mutation. The director of the Wellcome charitable foundation, Jeremy Farrar, told BBC radio transmissi­on was “eye-wateringly high”, as daily infection rates nudged towards 100,000.

Prime minister Boris Johnson has ruled out immediate curbs in the run-up to Christmas. Tighter public health measures could yet be introduced after this weekend, according to media reports.

Across the country, all sectors of British industry have been hit as staff contract the virus and are forced to self-isolate at home.

As the Christmas getaway begins, train companies apologised for employee absences and warned they could affect scheduled

services and even lead to cancellati­ons.

Edinburgh Castle and the National History Museum in London – two of the country’s most visited attraction­s – were forced to close their doors because of staff illnesses.

That came after several theatres in London’s West End entertainm­ent district cancelled performanc­es to protect performers and the public.

Meanwhile, the hotel and restaurant industry has seen closures because of a lack of staff. And in the public sector, the government has called for retired teachers to help out, as the virus forces staff members out of the classroom.

In London, unions have warned that firefighte­rs face “unpreceden­ted” manpower shortages, although its response to emergencie­s has not yet been affected.

The hospitalit­y and retail sectors were already feeling the pinch of staff shortages, as foreign staff left due to the pandemic and new post-Brexit immigratio­n rules.

Johnson has come under pressure from business owners and industry bodies to reintroduc­e support packages for Covid-hit sectors, who were already struggling after curbs in the last year.

He is, however, also facing intense pressure from his own Conservati­ve party colleagues not to bring in tougher restrictio­ns on public freedoms.

Last week, nearly 100 of his own MPs voted against the roll-out of vaccine passports to allow access to some venues, including sports grounds.

 ?? ?? FEELING THE PINCH: The hotel and restaurant industry has seen closures because of a lack of staff
FEELING THE PINCH: The hotel and restaurant industry has seen closures because of a lack of staff

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