14 Jan 2021

Hospitality boss to return Covid grant if venues used as vaccination centres

dermot-king(889044)

Hospitality boss Dermot King, which heads up restaurant group Oakman Inns, of which the The Beech House in Solihull is a part, has agreed to return £250,000 in Covid grants if the Chancellor allows Oakman Inns' venues to be used as vaccination centres.

Under the business grants scheme outlined by Chancellor Rishi Sunak, Oakman Inns would have received more than £250,000 during the next four months, but Mr King is ready to give that back to the Government to help pay for a bigger and quicker vaccination roll-out.

He explained: “The only route to any normality is through mass vaccination and for that the NHS needs to be able to work at scale. The entire hospitality industry is desperate to re-open as quickly as possible before we have huge scale redundancies across the sector."

Oakman Inns has 28 properties across many of the Home Counties and the Midlands, which have large refrigeration areas to help with storage and are Covid-19 safe.

Mr King added: “Our pubs have large indoor spaces and in some cases large car parks and accommodation, which could accommodate large numbers of people around the clock.

"Clearly, the money offered by the Chancellor would help us in the short-term, but realistically the only way all of us can get back to normal is to get the country vaccinated. We would rather let the Government keep their hand-out to invest it in using hospitality venues as vaccination centres for the greater good of all.

“The hospitality sector has the venues, it has the infrastructure, the venues are sitting empty, and our offer even includes a contribution towards the cost of the scheme.

"We want to help the Government and the people of the UK beat Covid-19 because the quicker we 're vaccinated, the more lives we save, the more jobs we save, the more businesses we save, and we 're prepared to do whatever it takes to see that happen. ”