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Friday, July 11, 2025

Retailers relieved as restrictions lifted

by

Joshua Seemungal
1865 days ago
20200601

Af­ter two months of be­ing closed, re­tail out­lets across the coun­try re­sumed busi­ness on Mon­day morn­ing, as part of phase three of the coun­try’s re­open­ing.

Own­ers whose doors had been locked since March 30, told Guardian Me­dia they were both pleased and re­lieved to be back out to work.

“It is great. Af­ter a long pe­ri­od home, we are hap­py to be out. We know it’s not go­ing to be 100 per cent, as it was be­fore, but we are here and we are will­ing to take it step-by-step,” said Cas­san­dra, own­er of the School and Of­fice Store in St James.

“Very strange,” was how Re­bec­ca, an em­ploy­ee at a pop­u­lar cloth­ing store in Port-of-Spain de­scribed her re­turn to work.

“Well, I haven’t been here for about two-and-a-half months now. So the first day back, it’s a lit­tle strange. It’s go­ing to be a bit dif­fer­ent in­ter­act­ing with the cus­tomers,” she said.

Both em­ploy­ers and own­ers de­scribed the past eight weeks of clo­sure as dif­fi­cult.

But the open­ing, on Mon­day, of­fered a much-need­ed boost.

“We are very hap­py to be open. It’s good for us. It’s good for the work­ers. It’s good for so­ci­ety as well,” said the own­er of US Ap­pli­ances and Elec­tron­ics in St James, Richard Singh.

An­tic­i­pat­ing a slow start to busi­ness, he adopt­ed a new strat­e­gy - dras­tic re­duc­tion prices, to at­tract more cus­tomers.

His first day back start­ed slow­ly but picked up pace lat­er on.

Ad­mit­ting that busi­ness suf­fered dur­ing the lock­down, he said his em­ploy­ees felt the brunt of the im­pact.

Dur­ing the down­time, he could on­ly af­ford to pay them a stipend.

“It was very hard to tell them about what was go­ing on. It was re­al­ly hard for them. It was hard for me to tell them,” Singh lament­ed.

“It’s like my tum­my has but­ter­flies. You don’t re­al­ly get that, but it’s a hap­py feel­ing,” said Sas­tri Singh, one of the store’s em­ploy­ees.

A renter, Sas­tri owes his land­la­dy two month’s rent, for April and May.

He said he was grate­ful that he was able to make it through the past few weeks.

As for the so­cial grant he ap­plied for, that was yet to ar­rive, he lament­ed, shak­ing his head.

With­out that as­sis­tance, he was forced to bor­row mon­ey.

He an­tic­i­pat­ed that it would take close to three weeks of work to pay it back.

“It was very hard for two months be­cause we didn’t re­ceive any grant, which we ap­plied for two months ago,” Sas­tri said.

“I’m still wait­ing on the grant a month and two weeks now,” said Re­bec­ca, a cloth­ing store em­ploy­ee.

Asked if she knew any­one who ap­plied and re­ceived the grant, she replied, “Not one per­son. Friends, fam­i­ly, cowork­ers, no­body...not one per­son has told me they have re­ceived any­thing.”

Ac­cord­ing to Min­is­ter of So­cial De­vel­op­ment and Fam­i­ly Ser­vices Camille Robin­son-Reg­is, as of May 21, 15,333 grants were paid at a to­tal cost of $21.17 mil­lion.


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