The Independent

Hospitalit­y is on its knees... yet all Matt Hancock can say is, he’ll ‘get back to me’

- JESS PHILLIPS

On Monday, along with MPs from the West Midlands, I Zoomed into a meeting with the health secretary Matt Hancock to hear about the fate of the city of Birmingham. I was given a full hour’s notice of this meeting, which would reveal what all of my constituen­ts would face.

I guess, as we’re in the middle of the country, we should have expected to be in the middle tier, and so it was. I was the first to ask a question. I wanted to know what support would be given to our hospitalit­y industry; until this point, venues had been able to serve up to six customers from different households, but

now they would potentiall­y see a massive decline in business, as people were not allowed to meet. Matt Hancock told me that there was only to be business support (of the sort that I was talking about) in those areas that were in the highest tier, such as Merseyside.

I suggested more should be done; there is in fact a £1.3bn discretion­ary grants scheme that could be reopened to allow local authoritie­s to respond to the needs of the businesses and workers in their area. He told me he would get back to me. The truth is that the time for him to be able to casually “get back to me” is long gone. The relentless incompeten­ce of the government this summer means there is no time for him to get back to me. Now that the government has lost control of the virus, huge damage is being done to the economy. I cannot see another way other than a “circuit break” to reset and to slow the spread. But alongside this we need to ensure we’re protecting workers, those bearing the brunt of the government’s failures over the last few months.

Matt Hancock insisted on this call that people could still work and that the government was doing all it could to protect workers. Another colleague asked if he realised that people in hospitalit­y are workers too, with bills to pay. I guess that’s the rub; the government seems to think that people who work in small food and drink businesses are all students on a gap year, or youngsters doing summer jobs, because… well, I guess that is, for many of them, their experience of the world. It is not mine.

Take my mate, Alistair, who runs a small local cafe, while his wife works in a local bakery. They have three young children, rent their home and have a couple of others who rely on their entreprene­urship for their own livelihood­s. They got by in the first half of this year helped by the schemes available; and, responding to Covid-19, they changed their business model and rearranged their establishm­ents. They dutifully made everyone who came in do the track and trace, sometimes having to cross the polite line of customer service in order to enforce government guidance. They did their bit.

The reality of what this all means where I live slapped me in the face as I opened the report from children’s charities and Loughborou­gh University on rising child poverty rates

Matt Hancock retorted on our call that the government had done more for hospitalit­y than nearly any other industry (obviously he was discountin­g the seeming industry in massive government contracts given out to Conservati­ve chums with little need for results). The government resting on the laurels of previous support schemes will do little to help with the rent, energy and insurance bills, which are piling up right now.

Monday came and went, and my inbox filled with scared small businesses and people terrified for their jobs. Then, yesterday, the reality of what this all means where I live slapped me in the face as I opened the report from children’s charities and Loughborou­gh University on rising child poverty rates. I read that, in the part of Birmingham I call home, more children live in poverty than don’t. The rising costs of rent and housing is what the report blames for the 12 per cent increase, in just three years, of children in my constituen­cy falling into poverty.

I think about Alistair and his three kids. He is a classic self-starting businessma­n, innovating and striving to support his family and the local community. Without proper support for people like him, we will certainly see another sky-rocketing of child poverty in the months and years to come. I sat at my desk in Westminste­r and put my head in my hands in despair. It didn’t have to be like this.

Yes, the pandemic is unpreceden­ted – not even I can blame its appearance in our lives on a prime minister who seems more intent on cracking mother-in-law gags than weeping about the poor children in our

country. But I can blame him and his kin for the fact that poverty where I live has spiralled over the last three years. The pandemic has and will push people over a cliff that they should never have been on the edge of; and as they fall off, there isn’t even a garden bridge to catch them.

My despair turns to fury because Alistair and so many others needed the government test and trace scheme to work. They needed our local council to have power and resource to manage local outbreaks months ago. They needed more support when they were put in “tier two” with very little notice. Politician­s – blue and red alike – of Birmingham, bishops, lords and the Chamber of Commerce have begged the government to support these businesses in our tier-two city, who are being damned by a thousand ever-changing restrictio­ns.

Without adequate support, I can think of at least three more children who will end up in the figures on child poverty. They are not just statistics to me; they are kids who I have picked up when their knees were scraped. Without better governance in our country I don’t know how I will soothe their tears. Perhaps I could tell them a mother-in-law gag.

Jess Phillips is the shadow minister for domestic violence and safeguardi­ng and Labour MP for Birmingham Yardley

 ??  ?? The health secretary was short on answers for the West Midlands (UK Parliament/PA)
The health secretary was short on answers for the West Midlands (UK Parliament/PA)

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