Ottawa business owners feel 'punished' by latest Ontario lockdown - Action News
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Ottawa business owners feel 'punished' by latest Ontario lockdown

Ottawa business owners say they're being swept up in the latest provincewide lockdownthat punishes them for following the rules.

'A big mistake,' says business owner about 28-day lockdown

Some Ottawa business owners feel punished by new lockdown

4 years ago
Duration 0:43
Lucas Nault, who owns a hair studio in Ottawa, says the new province-wide lockdown feels unfair when COVID-19 case numbers in the city are relatively low.

Ottawa business owners say they're being swept up in the latest provincewide lockdownthat punishes them for following the rules.

Lucas Nault, a Centretown salon owner, said he's frustrated. He installedrigid plastic barriers andreduced his staff hours to follow capacity guidelines, all in an effort to flatten the curve in Ottawa.

Ottawa came out of a modified Stage 2 lockdown in early November that prohibitedindoor dining, gyms, casinos and movie theatres.

The city has had relatively low COVID-19 case numbers and deaths in recent weeks, compared to other regions in Ontario. As of Monday, there were no patients reportedin intensive care units (ICU) at city hospitals.

"If we're following the rules and the numbers are down and there's no cases in the ICU, I don't understand why we're being punished atour busiest time of year, after being closed down for months," Nault said.

He said he has to cancel several appointments next week, including from customers who'd been quarantining specifically so they could get their hair styled.

Personal care services are among those businesses that haveto close completely starting Boxing Day. The southern Ontario lockdowns are expected to lastuntil Jan. 23, 2021.

Lucas Nault, owner of Lucas Nault Hair Studio, said the Ontario government's new lockdown measures are punishing businesses that were following the rules in Ottawa. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

Catherine Landry, CEO of events-planning business Call Betty Marketing, said the government is making "a big mistake."

"[It] will create havoc on entrepreneurs," she said. "This will be the final nail on a lot of people's ... business coffin."

Landry said small business owners in Ottawa shouldn't be looped in with other regions.

"We don't deserve this at all. We've abided by the [restrictions]. We followed everything to a T," she said.

Ford cites travel risks for Ottawa

Premier Doug Ford said the lockdown in Ottawa was in part because strict measures are being applied throughout Quebec, so the tighter rules would keep Quebecers from crossing the river "in droves."

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson said city staff haven't seen an unusual spike in inter-provincial travel and he finds police checkpoints at bridges ineffective. Watson said the Ontario Provincial Police couldstep in, if the province is concerned.

Mark Kaluski, chair of the Ottawa Coalition of Business Improvement Areas, said banning travel between municipalities could've been a more effective way to contain the spread over the holiday season and keep businesses afloat.

He said business owners arefrustrated because they thought they had adopted a mix of measures that would work until a more complete vaccine rollout.

"We really thought the closures were behind us. Especially given how we handled ourselves through the previous two lockdowns," Kaluski said.

"What I fear is that we're going to see a lot of businesses close ...I can't see how businesses will hold on."

Kaluski said retailers who were looking forward to a Boxing Day boost to their bottom lines may lose out to big-box stores.

He said he's glad the province has created a grant program, rather than a loan, for small businessesthat have to close during the lockdown period.

With files from Priscilla Hwang

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