Gym bosses urge Boris Johnson to let them reopen by May
Gym bosses urge Boris Johnson to let them reopen by May as PureGym chief says firm is ‘burning £500,000 a DAY’ during ‘brutally tough’ lockdown
- All gyms have been closed in England since third national lockdown in January
- Gyms were also forced to close in previous lockdowns in March and November
- Gyms were forced to close in some areas which were under toughest ‘Tier’ rules
- CEO of PureGym today told BBC Radio 4 he hoped gyms would reopen by May
Gym bosses have today urged Boris Johnson to let them reopen by May, as one company chief warned his firm is ‘burning through £500,000 a day’ in lockdown.
In a stark warning, Humphrey Cobbold, CEO of PureGym said the company been surviving without income for two-thirds of a year due to restrictions.
The firm, which has 275 gyms across the country and is one of the largest operators in the UK, had ‘burnt through’ £120million in what had been a ‘brutally tough’ year for the industry.
But he said he was hopeful that gyms, all of which were forced to shut again in January due to the national lockdown, could reopen in April or May.
It comes as Boris Johnson’s roadmap out of lockdown was today revealed, and is set to be discussed in Parliament later today.
Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme, Mr Cobbold said: ‘It’s been brutally tough.
Gym bosses have today urged Boris Johnson to let them reopen by May, as one company chief warned his firm is ‘burning through £500,000 a day’ in lockdown. Pictured: A member of staff at a gym cleaning equipment in November – when gyms were allowed to be open
In a stark warning, Humphrey Cobbold (pictured), CEO of PureGym said the company been surviving without income for two-thirds of a year due to restrictions
It comes as Boris Johnson’s (pictured today while running in Westminster) roadmap out of lockdown was today revealed, and is set to be discussed in Parliament later today.
‘We are burning about £500,000 a day at the moment and that’s about the average over eight months of closure.
‘If you top that up therefore, we’ll have burnt through £120million or so through the lockdowns.’
On opening up, which he said he hoped could happen in either April or May, he said: ‘We’ve made the case to Government to get gyms reopened.
‘We’ve demonstrated that gyms are safe and that we can make a massive contribution on the health of the nation, both physical and mental.
‘And that’s why we hope to get open ideally alongside non-essential retail.’
The reopening call has also been backed by bosses at rival firm Gym Group.
Richard Darwin, chief executive of the The Gym Group, told the Sun: ‘The link between exercise and mental health is well understood – our members rely on working out in our gyms to improve their state of mind.’
All gyms have been closed across England since the third national lockdown was introduced.
Gyms were also closed in the first and second national lockdowns, while fitness centres in areas which fell under stricter rules in the Tier system were also forced to close at other times last year.
Today, Boris Johnson faced Tory demands to speed up lockdown easing and make it ‘irreversible’ as he vowed to unveil a ‘cautious’ exit strategy – with all schools reopening from March 8 but precious few other easings until Easter.
The PM is set to reveal his ‘roadmap’ in a statement to the Commons this afternoon once it is rubber-stamped by Cabinet, after scientists seemingly won the battle for a slow approach regardless of the surging vaccination drive.
The first steps to freedom will prioritise getting children fully back into classrooms in a fortnight’s time, while people will also be able meet one friend or family member in the park for a coffee or a picnic from March 8.
However, the next stage of loosening will not be until March 29, when the Rule of Six will make a comeback – and be extended to allow two households to gather, enabling relatives to meet properly for the first time in months.
That date will also see the reopening of tennis courts and golf courses and the return of grassroots football.
But people will not be allowed to take holidays over the Easter weekend. And shops, hairdressers and pubs are all likely to remain closed until mid-April at the earliest, regardless of mounting fears about the economic meltdown.
The roadmap, which runs to around 60 pages, is set to include modelling supporting the government’s tentative strategy.
It will be published alongside more positive news about the effectiveness of jabs in reducing transmission, with vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi saying the evidence ‘looks good’. A major study published today found they were working ‘spectacularly well’ and cutting hospital admissions by as much as 95 per cent.
But Mr Johnson will run the gauntlet of anger on his own benches this afternoon, as he sets four tests for continuing with any easing including no new concerns emerging about variant strains. The other criteria are the vaccine rollout going well, jabs being effective at reducing hospital admissions and deaths, and avoiding a surge in hospital cases.
Mr Johnson’s plans for easing lockdown have been bolstered by the latest data whihc shows Covid-19 infection rates have continued to drop, with 9,834 more cases reported – a fall of 10 per cent on last week – while the 215 new daily deaths brought Britain’s total up to 120,580
Notably the rules do not mean that the loosening must stop if infections rise – as ministers believe they inevitably will when schools open. Instead the focus will be on serious illness that increases pressure on the NHS, with the goal of keeping the R number below one apparently downgraded.
Previous modelling has suggested that a third peak will happen when restrictions are eased, with the question whether it risks overwhelming capacity.
There is expected to be a five-week gap between the main steps in the roadmap, even longer than had been anticipated.
Mr Johnson tweeted this morning: ‘Our priority has always been getting children back into school which we know is crucial for their education and wellbeing. We’ll also be prioritising ways for people to reunite with loved ones safely.
‘Our decisions will be made on the latest data at every step, and we will be cautious about this approach so that we do not undo the progress we have achieved so far and the sacrifices each and every one of you has made to keep yourself and others safe.’
However, ex-Cabinet minister David Davis said the positive news on vaccines together with the warmer weather going into the summer meant cases will fall. He urged the PM to ensure changes to the lockdown were ‘irreversible’.
Tory MP Tim Loughton warned that there must not be ‘any more shifting of the goalposts’, attacking the idea that a five-week delay is needed between loosenings. He told Sky News the ‘default’ position should be to ease the crackdown. ‘Let’s be opening all these things up unless something absolutely material information changes that,’ he said.
Former chief whip Mark Harper, chair of the 70-strong Tory Covid Recovery Group, said: ‘Keeping restrictions in place ”because a new variant may come along in the future” is a recipe for never unlocking. Ever.’
Children in Scotland and Wales are already returning to classrooms from today, although the move is being staggered.
Business chiefs are urging Mr Johnson to ‘be bold’ to save the economy.
Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, said now was the time ‘to commit to reopening our pubs so that thousands of communities and businesses up and down the country can begin to emerge from this crisis’.