Disappointment at red light status quo

Some businesses have not been able to operate under the Red light restrictions. Photo: John Borren/SunLive.

'Bitter disappointment” is how some organisations describe the reaction to New Zealand staying at red Covid setting.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern made the announcement in a post-cabinet meeting on Monday.

While cases were dropping in Auckland, Wellington and Tairāwhiti others regions like Canterbury, Northland and Waikato were not experiencing the same drop. Hospitalisations in some District Health Board regions were not expected to peak until mid- to late-April.

'So for now, New Zealand will remain at red,” says Ardern.

'I know there is an eagerness to move to orange, but we are still frankly amid an outbreak and there is still pressure across our hospital network.

'Public health advice is that now is not the time to ease restrictions and drop to orange.”

Tauranga Business Chamber CEO Matt Cowley says most businesses were hoping for a decision that the Bay of Plenty region would be in orange by the Easter break.

'It's been a mentally straining start to the year and I'm sure plenty of kiwis would want to travel domestically for a change of scene.

'But the red setting sends a signal that people probably shouldn't travel, and that entertainment venues and attractions may not be operating as they should be.

'A change to orange would have boosted those sectors hurting the most from Governments restrictions.”

Tauranga Business Chamber CEO Matt Cowley. Supplied photo.

Cowley says CBDs across the country are also continuing to struggle as corporates are requiring their staff to work from home under red setting.

He says there is a shifting mood that people should be empowered to self-manage their own risks.

'Customers are managing their own risks by avoiding high-risk situations, and employers are working with individual staff who have higher risks.”

The Restaurant Association says the decision to stay at the red traffic light level will come as a bitter disappointment for the hospitality industry which continues to struggle under the current restrictions.

'Patronage continues to be down on previous years and whilst this is starting to pick up, the decision to stay in red will not do much to help consumer confidence,” says CEO Marisa Bidois.

The March member feedback survey from the Restaurant Association indicated that businesses continue to struggle with 90 per cent of respondents saying their revenue is down on 2021 with the average revenue decrease sitting at 34 per cent.

Marisa Bidois. Supplied photo.

'We are not public health experts, however the seated and separated rule is incredibly challenging for venues.

'Hospitality venues are places where people want to socialise with others, particularly in bars and clubs so the enforcement of this rule will continue to be a sizeable issue for the industry.

'Once again, we continue to advocate for financial support in the form of a wage subsidy for our businesses who are facing significantly reduced patronage as a result of this outbreak.

'As well as more financial support, we would also like to see the Government outline a tangible vision for the recovery of our sector which clearly sets out the indicators required for a move to orange.

'We believe this should include a change of rhetoric from one of fear to one of hope and incentives, such as a subsidized dining scheme, to get people back out and stimulating the economy.”

BusinessNZ says businesses continue to suffer at red.

In a statement released following the PM's announcement, the organisation says remaining at red is a disappointing announcement for the many businesses unable to operate normally at the highest traffic light setting.

Chief Executive Kirk Hope says more clarity is needed around acceptable rates of admission for the health sector, so businesses can better anticipate the threshold for a change in settings.

'The Government needs to outline specifically the conditions in which we can all expect see a shift to lower settings before the next review on April 14.

'Businesses want to start planning for a return to normality, be resourced and ready to go when the time comes.”

Hope says with case numbers trending down, getting over peak Omicron should mean a step down from peak restrictions.

'Border restrictions, MIQ and vaccine mandates have all played a part in keeping our communities safe and lifting vaccination rates throughout the pandemic.

'Easing these measures signals that we are headed in the right direction in the fight against Omicron.

'Each day we operate under excess restrictions, the more New Zealand will struggle to recover.”

2 comments

Lights and lockdowns

Posted on 05-04-2022 12:38 | By an_alias

They have not helped anyone at all but achieved the goal of destroying small business. Yep goal achieved.


RED

Posted on 05-04-2022 13:37 | By jeancraven@kinect.co.nz

Better to be safe than sorry....


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