The Scotsman

Edinburgh hospitalit­y needs a recovery plan

Other cities took an active approach to helping eateries open, so where’s the big idea for the capital, asks Stephen Jardine

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It’s not good to be jealous but when it comes to people who live in Los Angeles, I’ll make an exception.

Not only do they have a great climate but from this week they get to enjoy it while eating outdoors again.

After a two-month closure to coincide with the latest Covid spike, outdoor eating spaces are once more open for business. With cases falling across Los Angeles County, public health officials say the time is right to cautiously restart the beleaguere­d hospitalit­y sector.

We are still a long way from that point here despite evidence presented last week to show hospitalit­y is perhaps not the threat we thought it was.

In a submission to the Commons Science and Technology Committee, the director of public health at Sheffield County Council, Greg Fell, said: “Most of the transmissi­on events are within households. Hospitalit­y doesn’t crop up as a terribly big risk on our radar.”

That said, we should eliminate whatever risk we can at the moment but looking ahead we need a plan and that has two requiremen­ts.

The Scottish Government needs to set the timeframe for the reopening of hospitalit­y and the parameters to do so safely and they will do that in due course. Then local authoritie­s need to look at what they can do to support the sector to help breathe new life into our moribund town and city centres.

In Edinburgh, that responsibi­lity falls with the city council and so far the silence has been deafening. It may seem a way off at the moment but we will reach a stage this spring where infection rates will be low enough to allow the cautious reopening of restaurant­s and bars. So what is the big plan?

In reality, this summer is not likely to look that much different from last summer in terms of restrictio­ns. But last year we saw some smart thinking from others. Like Edinburgh, Vilnius is a World Heritage Site but unlike Scotland’s capital, the authoritie­s decided to turn the city centre into a giant outdoor café. It was an enormous success in the peak summer months and yet over that time, only seven people died from Covid in the whole of Lithuania.

Other cities also took an active approach to helping the hospitalit­y sector operate safely. In Toronto, the authoritie­s stripped back regulation­s and fees to help clusters of restaurant­s and cafes work together to open outside.

Most of these initiative­s were pulled together very quickly and are currently suspended due to the second surge, but they will return. If it all happened too quickly for Edinburgh last year, what is the excuse this year?

This week the council unveiled a three-year business plan ticking all the predictabl­e boxes about ensuring well-being and becoming a net-zero city.

But what does that actually mean and how will we go about filling empty shops and offices and stimulatin­g businesses into recovery to pay for a greener, fairer Edinburgh?

This week in Punxsutawn­ey, Pennsylvan­ia, Phil the Groundhog came out of his lair and predicted six more weeks of winter. If a small North American rodent can emerge from hibernatio­n and get its act together in the midst of a pandemic, surely it’s not too much to expect the City of Edinburgh Council to do the same?

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