Coronavirus
Liverpool Hospitality Association sends impassioned letter to government in a bid to save city venues
5 years ago
Liverpool Hospitality Association – a collective of over 100 local businesses – has written an impassioned letter to the government and more specifically The Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak in a bid to save the cityâs restaurants, bars, hotels and attractions.
Chaired by chef and owner of The Arts School Restaurant, Paul Askew, the LHA details how the Coronavirus pandemic is leaving the cityâs hospitality businesses âin a position that they may not surviveâ.
Lockdown and social distancing measures have seen the nationâs hospitality sector either completely closed or with tough restrictions, and the Liverpool Hospitality Association highlights that the industry will be one of the last to reopen and when it does it will still be âheavily influenced by the social distancing mandateâ.
The LHA is made up of some of the cityâs most successful and much-loved businesses including the Arts School Restaurant, Graffiti Spirits Group (Duke Street Market, Bold Street Coffee, Salt Dog Slims, 81 Ltd, Slimâs, Santa Chupitos, Maluco Pizzeria, El Bandito, Castle Street Coffee and Super Megabite), Maray, Red and Blue Restaurants (Salt House Tapas, Bacaro, Hanover Street Social and Rocket & Ruby), Paul Moran of Living Ventures and many others.
The Liverpool Hospitality Associationâs emotional letter details how hopes of Liverpoolâs businesses ânow hang in tattersâ and how so many local people have âgrafted for years, fighting for survivalâ and how âbegging does not come easily. Yet here we are on bended knee.â
The letter asks for support in the following:
#NationalTimeOut initiative supporting rent payments to landlords for a 9 month period without being added to the end of the lease.
#RasieTheBar initiative – raising the current ÂŁ51k threshold to ÂŁ151k for business rate grants.
Furlough Pay Review – a review of measures for the hospitality sector considering the expected long-term timescales for recovery.
Directors of Limited Companies be in line with self-employed – allowing dividends to be considered via company records, not just basic PAYE pay.
VAT reduction – a reduction in VAT for all Visitor Economy sector to 10% for a minimum 12 month period.
Insurance companies held accountable (many hospitality businesses have been advised theyâre not covered as COVID-19 isnât mentioned in their policies).
CBILS movement on 100% Government back up to ÂŁ100k (many have been unable to be accepted due to new venues, small profits, past history or future concern of longevity in the environment).
Paul Askew, Chair of the LHA and owner of The Arts School, said: âCOVID-19 has created unprecedented circumstances for all, and for the hospitality industry, there are extraordinarily uncertain times ahead. Weâll be one of the last sectors to reopen and even then, our new normal will be a stark contrast to the busy and bustling venues weâre used to.
âLiverpoolâs hospitality sector has a visitor economy worth ÂŁ4.9bn and we provide over 57,000 jobs and to ensure that collectively this is possible moving forward, weâll need long-term support from the government.â
Matt Farrell, co-founder of Graffiti Spirits Group, added: âHospitality businesses are âcultural banksâ, and as with many other services, are there for the community as much as they are for the business owners. They will need ongoing help and support to be there when society is ready. Supporting and following this cause is categorically the only way to help survival.â
City will be strong again and waiting to welcome back tourists, says Marketing Liverpool boss Chris Brown.https://t.co/xZeoOc8hLi
— The Guide Liverpool (@TheGuideLpool) April 25, 2020