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Retail & Consumer

Welsh bed and breakfasts say they are still slipping through Covid-19 safety net

Small business owners have told Business Live they are frozen out of all the support packages

Taldrwst Farm Bed and Breakfast in Dwyran, Anglesey(Image: Taldrwst)

Bed and breakfast owners say they are still slipping through the coronavirus safety net, even though the same businesses in England are being supported.

The Retail, Hospitality and Leisure Grant Fund (RHLGF) supports businesses in those sectors with grants of up to £25,000.

In England, the grant scheme is open to B&B owners who pay both domestic or business rates, but in Wales only business rate payers qualify.

There had been hopes that Welsh Government’s latest phase of the £1.7bn Economic Resilience Fund would finally help plug that gap but business owners say they have once again been frozen out.

North Wales MS Mark Isherwood has been pressing their case in the Senedd.

Among those affected are retired teacher Dafydd Jones and his wife Dawn who invested their savings into setting up two businesses last year, The Sweet Escape Retreat B&B and beekeepers training venture Anglesey Bees in Llanddaniel.

After a successful first summer season they hoped for a bumper 2020 before the coronavirus pandemic shutdown the sector. They hoped their plight would see them secure government support funds, but Dafydd says his small bed and breakfast is slipping through every safety net.

The Sweet Escape Retreat B&B, Llanddaniel(Image: dafyddjones)

They missed out on the rates grants as they live at the property and pay domestic council tax and now do not meet the latest criteria of the Economic Resilience Fund.