º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

'Lifeline' wanted for Welsh hospitality and retail in lockdown since before Christmas

Groups representing businesses in the sector want to know when new support will be announced

Broughton Retail Park(Image: Ian Cooper)

Retail and hospitality groups want extra support to provide a “lifeline” for businesses in Wales left unable to trade since lockdown before Christmas.

First Minister Mark Drakeford placed Wales into Alert Level 4 on December 20 - shutting all hospitality and non-essential retailers in the crucial pre-Christmas period.

There has been £450m in support for firms affected by the latest measures but with lockdown continuing until at least the end of January and likely beyond more support is now being called for.

Sara Jones. head of Welsh Retail Consortium, said: “Shops and high streets across Wales have been left reeling by coronavirus and there simply isn’t a taxpayer-funded support scheme which can replace the potential losses of store closures.

"Therefore, it is absolutely vital that the Government provides additional targeted financial support which will be a lifeline for non-essential stores through the current phase of being unable to open and trade.

Sara Jones head of the Welsh Retail Consortium(Image: Handout)

“We are seeking an urgent commitment to extend the business rates relief beyond April 2021, otherwise many more businesses will become unviable and many thousands of jobs will be at risk.”

º£½ÇÊÓÆµHospitality Cymru said extended lockdown means pubs, bars, cafes and hotels across North Wales immediately need a new cash cocktail of financial support to survive.

David Chapman, º£½ÇÊÓÆµHC executive director, said: “The Welsh Government has worked with us to define and deliver sector specific help which, with the crucial contributions of furlough, business rates relief and VAT cuts from Westminster, has kept many of our businesses alive.