Nightclub and bar operators must ensure Covid compliance to avoid new restrictions Taoiseach

over 2 years in The Irish Times

Nightclub and bar operators need to “make sure there is compliance” with Covid regulations if new restrictions are to be avoided, Taoiseach Micheál Martin has said.
Speaking in Brussels where is he attending a summit of EU leaders, Mr Martin stressed that both customers and business operators needed to ensure that Covid passes were checked and other regulations were observed.
“The bottom line is this. To avoid any new restrictions coming in, to avoid going back, will demand vigilance on behalf of the people generally - all of us. And therefore when we go to establishments, we should at least as a minimum, insist that the basic standards have been applied,” he said.
Mr Martin said that he had not heard earlier suggestions from Tánaiste Leo Varadkar that private security personnel could have a role in enforcing compliance with rules in pubs and nightclubs.
“I haven’t heard the Tánaiste’s remarks,” Mr Martin said, “but suffice to say my view in terms of compliance is that we have to really work hard, collectively with the sector, to build up compliance in relation to the application with vaccination certificates using all of the agencies”.
He said that environmental health officers “have a role to play... but I think fundamentally the operators need to engage, make sure there is compliance, as well as the public”.
Mr Martin said he was “concerned about the increase in numbers” which would have necessitated another lockdown were it not for the vaccination programme.
“The situation in relation to Covid, you know, is deteriorating, not just here but across Europe and in quite a number of member states. We’re in a better position, comparatively, because we have higher levels of vaccination, which is helping to prevent severe illness and death.
“But you know we are concerned about what’s happening in the UK . . . And likewise another EU member states.”
Anomalies
He said that anomalies between various sectors would “iron out” but added: “I would appeal to all sectors as well not to be looking at the sector next door and saying, ‘I want a bit of that’”.
Earlier, the Tánaiste Leo Varadkar has said the Government could not rule out the reimposition of Covid restrictions although he added that his hope was that the country could “ride out” the current wave of infections.
“Nobody can rule out the reimposition of restrictions,” Mr Varadkar, who is also in brussels, told journalists.



The Tánaiste told reporters in Brussels that he hoped the country would be able to ‘ride out’ any surge in Covid numbers ‘but that can’t be guaranteed unfortunately’. Photograph: Reuters


“The CMO (chief medical officer, Dr Tony Holohan) was clear about that in his letter. I’ve always been clear that I thought we’d have to get through at least another winter before we can say that the pandemic was safely behind us.”
However, Mr Varadkar added: “We do have 800 more beds in our hospital system than we had before the pandemic, we have surge capacity in the ICUs. We have the ability, if needs be, to use the private hospitals so, you know, it is possible for us to ride out this wave, to get through the second peak of delta, without having to reimpose restrictions. But that can’t be guaranteed unfortunately.”
Mr Varadkar also said that the in hospitals the current wave is “a pandemic of the unvaccinated.”
“Most of the people in ICU are not vaccinated. So we’d ask the people who haven’t been vaccinated to please do so.”
Mr Varadkar said that the reopening of hospitality was being done in “a cautious way with controls and protections... but it’s getting back to normal, it’s not the old normal, it’s the new normal, at least until next spring”.
“You know the simplest thing is to say to people ‘stay at home’. The second simplest is ‘go back to normal’. The bit in between, which is risk mitigation, safely reducing risk but acknowledging there is a risk is a bit more difficult, and that’s a challenge that we haven’t had,” he said.
Scrambling to prepare
Asked if he understood the frustration of nightclub owners who are scrambling to prepare for reopening without clear guidelines, he said: “I totally understand the frustration. But you know this is an evolving situation.
“We only received the advice on Monday nature of sales, and we’ve been engaging with them ever since, so we’d expect to have those guidelines out today, so to be ready for tonight.”
He had no plans to go to a nightclub himself, he said.
Mr Varadkar is in Brussels for a meeting of leaders of the European people’s Party Group, the alliance of Christian Democratic parties of which Fine Gael is a member.
It takes place in advance of an EU summit today and tomorrow, which is being attended by Taoiseach Micheál Martin.
The Tánaiste said that the EPP leaders would discuss “pan European issues, how we deal with the pandemic which is ongoing, the energy price crisis which is affecting the entire continent, and also other issues, for example, around the rule of law in Poland”.
He said that the EPP’s approach to Poland had been one of “inclusion”.
“You know, we’ve tried to keep people in the club and keep people in the European Union, including United Kingdom, but obviously that wasn’t successful.
“And in relation to Poland, the opposition to the government in Poland is led by the EPP, you know, Donald Tusk, the President is leading the opposition in Poland and is very much saying to the Polish people that when the next elections comes ‘choose a European course, choose to be a full member of the European Union again’ and I look forward to campaigning for Donald in Poland when that time comes.”

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