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Barry Soper: It's time the labels of essential business and workers were redefined

Author
Barry Soper,
Publish Date
Mon, 13 Sep 2021, 7:17PM
(Photo / Getty)
(Photo / Getty)

Barry Soper: It's time the labels of essential business and workers were redefined

Author
Barry Soper,
Publish Date
Mon, 13 Sep 2021, 7:17PM
The decision taken around the Cabinet table on the 10th floor of the Beehive yesterday wasn't just as simple as unlocking Auckland.
For this Government which has never admitted to any wrongdoing, it was a nightmare. To come down from Alert Level 4 would have been an acknowledgement that the lockdown wasn't working and that its Covid elimination strategy, now ditched by most of the world as being unworkable, was in fact just that.
So the lock's been kept in place for just over another week which is simply delaying the inevitable.
This will be the longest Level 4 lockdown the country's seen which has sadly claimed just one death, a woman in her 90s with underlying health issues. That's not because we have become better at handling the virus. The Delta virus is simply more infectious but not as deadly.
And at least the Beehive has finally recognised that the main tool in the kit is to vaccinate - it was as though a light bulb went off in the Ministerial offices and the rollout became vitally important.
But it was always important, they were told time and time again that Delta was on its way.
Jacinda Ardern's Year of the Vaccination became her year of vacillation, that is until her mate Scomo across the ditch scouted around his buddies abroad and got some additional viles of the stuff. At the current rate they were coming into this country we were going to run out this month with the growing number of people who had decided it was a good idea to get the jab immediately.
Now the Government's job is to ensure the jabs are put into arms in the right place, the epicentre of the outbreak South Auckland, something they were told long before this outbreak but chose, for whatever reason, to ignore.
There has to be a concerted campaign in the south of the city, to not only vaccinate but to randomly test and to educate.
In the meantime, businesses will continue to struggle to make ends meet, not just in the country's biggest city but in areas that depend on it, like the tourist centres.
The Government might like to turn their attention to an area that's woefully lacking around this Cabinet table, business experience, the listen to those who know infinitely more about it than they do.
Imagine the frustration of the man who brought us the animated visuals for the Americas Cup and for cricket and the likes, Sir Ian Taylor who's domiciled in Dunedin.
Three of his animators are flatmates in the city and they were in the middle of a project servicing Europe and applied for an exemption to go into an empty office.    They were declined by some bureaucrat behind a desk in Wellington.
So, they decided to make their office their home and got the job done, saving the multi-million dollar contract.
Point made by Taylor is that business is innovative and will find ways of operating in bubbles without contact, it's in their best interests to do so, and the Government should acknowledge that.
It's time the labels essential business and workers were redefined. All business is essential to the economy and workers are essential to their success.
Taylor's offered his services to the Government, along with other like-minded business people who want the country to survive.
The phone's on the hook, he's waiting for the call.

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