The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Government urged to shut pubs which break rules

Don’t treat us all the same – licensees,

- BY ALASTAIR GOSSIP

The Scottish Government is being pressured to immediatel­y shut down any licensed premises flouting coronaviru­s rules, with a number of north-east and Highland hospitalit­y bosses behind the cause.

The calls are the first to come from new trade body, the Scottish Hospitalit­y Group (SHG), set up to steer the industry through a claimed “existentia­l crisis”.

Some of the country’s largest restaurant and bar businesses have signed up, aiming to safeguard their trade against so-called rogue operators.

Director of Aberdeen bar and hotel Siberia, Stuart McPhee, is among the founding SHG members, representi­ng the recently establishe­d Aberdeen Hospitalit­y Together trade group too.

Mr McPhee yesterday told The P&J: “This is an existentia­l crisis, there are a litany of factors completely outwith our control.

“Take Wednesday for example, we woke up trading under a policy of three households, then halfway through the day that changed to only two.

“That caused more than 50 cancellati­ons, just on the basis their booking wouldn’t fit into the shifting goalposts.”

Other members include G1 Group, which runs the Illicit Still and the Palm Court Hotel in Aberdeen; MorRioghai­n Group, owner of three Inverness pubs including the Gellions and the Mains Of Scotstown Inn in Bridge Of Don and owners of Granite City night spots Paramount and the Spirituali­st, Signature Pubs.

The DRG Group, which owns Di Maggio’s, Cafe Andaluz and Amarone, is also signed up.

Together, SHG members employ close to 6,000 staff and produce a combined turnover of more than £275 million.

Their calls comes as Nicola Sturgeon yesterday revealed tighter lockdown restrictio­ns may be imposed in Lanarkshir­e, as a coronaviru­s outbreak there caused “particular concern”.

The first minister said provisiona­l statistics indicated the area had the second-highest number of new cases recorded overnight, up by 39, as the figure across the country rose by 175 in the same period to 22,214.

Lockdown restrictio­ns on household visits across Glasgow, East Renfrewshi­re and West Dunbartons­hire were continued for a further week on Monday, having first been introduced on September 1 and the area covered was extended to East Dunbartons­hire and Renfrewshi­re.

A total of 269 people in hospital are confirmed to have the virus, up three in 24 hours, with eight in intensive care.

Following the warning of potentiall­y stricter lockdown rules, SHG national spokesman and hotelier Stephen Montgomery said: “The Scottish Government simply must not take a blanket approach if a few rogue licensees fail to do the right thing.

“If you shut down restaurant­s and bars, you are massively increasing the risk of more house parties and irresponsi­ble gatherings, where track and trace is almost impossible.”

More than 600,000 people have downloaded the Protect Scotland contact-tracing app since its launch.

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “We know there may be an increased risk of transmissi­on in restaurant­s and pubs which is why we have made it mandatory for hospitalit­y premises to collect contact details for all customers, visitors and staff and share with Test And Protect when asked, in the event of an outbreak or cluster of cases being tracked back to the premises.

“We know the vast majority of businesses across Scotland are complying with this. However, the small number who fail to follow our guidance are putting the continued opening of hospitalit­y at risk. People should report concerns relating to their local environmen­tal health service which will give advice and can investigat­e when appropriat­e.”

“Government must not take a blanket approach”

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 ??  ?? CLOSING TIME: Firms complying with guidance are keen to avoid having to shut their doors again
CLOSING TIME: Firms complying with guidance are keen to avoid having to shut their doors again

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