Politics

Pubs and restaurants allowed to turn into take-aways to help keep going during coronavirus crisis


PUBS and restaurants will be able to turn into takeaways within days to help provide food for people in self-isolation.

The move is also designed to help millions of pubs and restaurants stay afloat and save mass job losses in the hospitality industry after Boris Johnson’s plea for the nation to stay away to avoid spreading coronavirus.

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 Pubs will be allowed to turn into take-aways without extra planning permission in days

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Pubs will be allowed to turn into take-aways without extra planning permission in daysCredit: Getty – Contributor

Ministers will relax planning regulations to allow them to start providing takeaways without having to first gain planning permission.
But the move will only apply to food and not booze.

A Downing Street spokesman said: “We are going to change planning permission so that pubs and restaurants will be able to turn into takeaways or delivery straight away.

“That will serve two purposes – it will (also) help to get food to people who might be staying at home.”

The spokesman said it would be a temporary measure that was “straightforward but will make a real difference”.

It came as Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced a package of measures to support businesses through the crisis including extending the business rates holiday to all businesses in the hospitality sector.

Extra measures to keep the sinking economy afloat included:

  • Cash grants of £25,000 for medium-sized businesses and thousands of £10,000 grants for small businesses – totalling £11.5bn
  • Lenders will offer 3 month mortgage holiday to anyone who needs it
  • Business rates holiday for 12 months for ALL firms in retail, hospitality and leisure – worth £9.5bn
  • Emergency powers for the Chancellor if he needs to take more action
  • Insurance forms will be forced to pay out to pubs, restaurants and shops who need help

Mr Sunak also said Government advice to avoid pubs, clubs and theatres was sufficient for businesses to claim on their insurance when they have cover for pandemics.

Sector leaders “cautiously” welcomed the Chancellor’s announcements and said it was “proper progress” on last week’s budget.

Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UKHospitality, said the Chancellor had “clearly been listening”.

She added: “The focus now has to be on making sure that hospitality businesses can draw down the support loans and other funds while they still have businesses to operate, such are the levels of urgency for most businesses.

“We will wait with great anticipation and hope that the detail on employment support measures live up to the hype but, if they are substantive, this could amount to a really helpful raft of support – this needs to come urgently as jobs are being lost every day.

“Cash flow is the key focus for companies endeavouring to survive. We only hope that this can be enough.”

The Chancellor’s funding package followed pressure on the Government to help the hospitality industry as it faces a “dire” situation during the coronavirus pandemic.

At a press conference in Downing Street on Monday afternoon, Prime Minister Boris Johnson advised people to avoid pubs, clubs, theatres and other social venues.

But his approach was condemned as “staggeringly reckless” and industry leaders warned that firms will go out of business without urgent state help to get through the next few months.

The Association of British Insurers (ABI) warned that most firms will not have cover allowing them to claim compensation if they are forced to shut.

 Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak announced new economic measures this afternoon

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Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak announced new economic measures this afternoonCredit: AP:Associated Press

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The British Beer and Pub Association wrote to Mr Johnson on Monday, demanding urgent steps to prevent mass job losses and permanent pub closures.

Chief executive Emma McClarkin said the industry is facing “an existential crisis” as a result of the new guidance, insisting thousands of jobs would be lost without financial help from the Government.

She said: “Forced pub closures without a meaningful support package will have a catastrophic financial and social impact.”

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Britain may have to take ‘further and faster’ drastic action in days, Boris Johnson says

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