º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Vertu Motors boss calls on Government to issue 'go to work if you can' advice

Robert Forrester says the benefits of returning to the workplace should be spelled out more clearly

Robert Forrester, CEO of Vertu Motors(Image: vertu motors)

The CEO of one of the North East’s largest companies has called for people to return to their workplaces, despite the continuing threat from the coronavirus outbreak.

In a piece written for The Journal, Vertu Motors CEO Robert Forrester argues that many people have already returned to work in certain sectors, and that the companies are best served by having staff working alongside their colleagues.

Vertu has a network of 133 sales and after-sales outlets across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ as well as its headquarters in Gateshead. It reopened all of its dealerships last month, having closed them at the start of lockdown, though it last week signalled almost 350 job losses as a result of new technologies.

Mr Forrester said that bringing staff back into workplaces would be difficult for some employers, but that it was important for productivity and the health of town and city centres.

He also said that Government guidance to wear masks could add to anxiety about the coronavirus and deter people from going into shops.

He said: “I reluctantly conclude that the introduction of more compulsory masks might dent confidence among consumers and workers. The prospect of covering up while the virus is in decline may remind people of why they were anxious when it was at its most virulent. People who were starting to find their way back to shops could easily be put off.

“However, I think the reluctance of so many white-collar firms to return to the workplace is a concern that without clearer instructions from the Government they will be accused of being gung-ho.

“Other sectors that were explicitly banned from opening were given explicit permission to re-open. Offices are slightly different; they were never really banned from opening and did not feature on the Government’s original closure notice in March.