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Long lines as shops reopen in England

Published:Tuesday | June 16, 2020 | 12:17 AM
Shoppers queue up outside Primark as it reopened in Birmingham, England, on Monday, June 15.
Shoppers queue up outside Primark as it reopened in Birmingham, England, on Monday, June 15.

For many in England, it’s been a day of much-needed retail therapy.

Long lines stretched down streets in England on Monday as shops selling items considered as non-essential during the coronavirus pandemic, such as sneakers and toys, welcomed customers for the first time since the United Kingdom (UK) was put into lockdown in late March.

Starved of the retail experience for the best part of three months, the keenest of shoppers rushed to make up for lost time, to pick up a bargain, browse or just have a chat.

Most appeared to abide by the rules of the ‘new normal’ to remain two metres (6½ feet) apart as they awaited their turn to enter the stores, though pushing and shoving was evident in some places, like the NikeTown store on Oxford Street, London’s famous shopping district.

For Pamela Crystal, 46, it was a far more relaxing experience at the nearby, upscale Selfridges department store.

“You don’t realise how much you miss physical shopping until you actually come into the shop. It’s great,” she said. “It’s nice to see people, talk to salespeople. It feels like we’re normal again.”

Monday’s reopening of shops only applies to England. Scotland and Wales are taking a more tentative approach to the easing of the coronavirus restrictions. Northern Ireland’s stores reopened last week. England also saw zoos, safari parks and drive-in cinemas reopen on Monday.

The new shopping experience is anything but normal, though.

Shops are limiting numbers and are providing hand sanitisers as well as creating one-way traffic systems inside. Plastic screens protect workers from shoppers at payment counters and some shops won’t accept cash. At the Apple store on Regent Street in central London, staff checked customers’ temperatures and insisted upon face coverings.

Not all shops in England are reopening. Many say the social-distancing guidelines are just too difficult and are urging the British government to reduce the two-metre requirement.

Critics have also accused the government of being too hasty, given still-high levels of daily coronavirus infections. Though the country’s daily virus-related death rates have fallen to below those seen before the lockdown, there are worries of a second spike. The UK, as a whole, has recorded 41,736 coronavirus-related deaths, the third-highest in the world behind the United States and Brazil.

CAUTIONED TO BE SENSIBLE

Customers are being encouraged to “be sensible” as the government seeks to reopen the economy “gradually and carefully”. Figures last week showed that the UK economy, which depends heavily on retail, shrank by 20 per cent in April alone.

With virtually no tourists in town, London’s entire West End shopping and theatre district is expected to see just 10 per cent to 15 per cent of its normal customers this week. International tourists now face a 14-day quarantine upon arrival in Britain.

Analysts say the pandemic has accelerated a shift to online shopping, not least because many businesses need to cut rental costs to survive.

To lure wary shoppers back, Selfridges lined up street performers to entertain anyone queuing, while DJs will play music inside to liven things up. Selfridges said the last time it had to close its doors was in 1941, when it was hit by a bomb during World War II.

“We’ve nearly doubled our sales online, but clearly three months’ closure is going to have an impact on our business,” said Meave Wall, store director at Selfridges. “Today’s the first day of what’s going to be quite a long journey back for us, but based on the customers we’ve seen queueing this morning, we’re definitely optimistic of a return to the stores.”

AP