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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Welsh hospitality sector says new 6pm closure restrictions will be devastating

From Friday pubs, restaurants and cafes will have to close from 6pm with no alcohol sales

Pubs and restaurants are going to be banned from selling alcohol and told to shut at 6pm in Wales(Image: Rowan Griffiths)

The hospitality sector says the Welsh Government's new Covid restrictions closing pubs, restaurants and cafes from 6pm with effect from this Friday with no serving of alcohol will have a devastating impact.

The new measures, announced by First Minister Mark Drakeford, include:

  • Pubs, bars, restaurants and cafes will have close by 6pm and will not be allowed to serve alcohol.
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  • They can provide takeaway services only after this time.

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  • From that date indoor entertainment venues like cinemas, bowling alleys soft play centres, skating rinks, amusement arcades and bingo halls must close.

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  • Museums, galleries and other heritage sites will also have to close but outdoor visitor attractions can stay open.

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  • No changes to extended households and gyms and leisure centres can stay open.

They will make a further announcement on travel restrictions later this week ahead of England's lockdown ending on December 2.

The Welsh Government said it is making further £340m available through its Economic Resilience Fund to support businesses affected by the new changes to the regulations. It will include a specific fund to support hospitality and tourism businesses.

The Wales Independent Restaurant Collective (WIRC), which has more than 300 supporters, said: "The severe limitations on trading just announced by the First Minister therefore come as a major blow to the businesses who have worked incredibly hard to make hospitality safe, and who have invested what funds they have left in this.

"These new measures are hard to take given the struggle to survive over the past nine months, and the constantly changing restrictions.

"With the latest announcements, our businesses will have been forced to close for longer this year than we have been allowed to trade. Hospitality has borne the brunt of restrictions not just in Wales but across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and the world and yet with the right measures in place we have proved it can be a safe place for people to meet and socialise during the pandemic."

Cerys Furlong owner of The Lansdowne and The Grange pubs and Milkwood restaurant in Cardiff said Not being able to serve alcohol and early closing means that trading will be a long way from viable for the majority of the sector, particularly in this Christmas period, which is crucial to the success or otherwise of most businesses in hospitality. However, we welcome the support funding from Welsh Government which we understand is intended to reflect more closely the scale of the challenges we face”