Kingsville businesses struggle with ongoing closures as Ontario continues reopening - Action News
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Kingsville businesses struggle with ongoing closures as Ontario continues reopening

Business owners in Kingsville say they're struggling, especially now that the town is one of only two Ontario communities prohibited from undergoing Stage 2 reopenings.

Kingsville and Leamington are currently the only two Ontario communities prohibited from entering Stage 2

While this sign might suggest that inclement weather is responsible for the closed patio, in reality, it's because the Ontario government is currently excluding two communities from undergoing Stage 2 reopenings. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

Kingsville restaurateur Heather Brown saysunder normal circumstancesher restaurant would be filled with customers and staff celebrating the summer sunshine together.

But since Brown who co-owns the Main Grill and Ale House along with her husband runs a restaurant in one of the only two Ontario communities currently prohibited from undergoing Stage 2 reopenings, her business is only open for takeout and delivery orders as a means of protecting the community from the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

"Kingsville has an amazing downtown area, Leamington has a beautiful downtown area, and we just want to be part of the reopening," she said.

On Wednesday, Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced that businesses in Windsor-Essex, including restaurant patios, as well as hair salons and barbershops, among others would be able to jointhe rest of the province on Thursday in entering Stage 2.

Heather Brown co-owns the Main Grill and Ale House in Kingsville along with her husband. She says she understands why her community hasn't been allowed to undergo Stage 2 reopenings, but that the ongoing closure of her business has nonetheless affected her income. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

However, Kingsville and Leamington aren't included, due to high COVID-19 numbers among agriculture workers on farms in the region.

Brown's restaurant has been closed for indoor and patio dining since March 17, when she and her husband made the decision to lay off staff and run the business on their own.

And though she said she understands the province's decision to prevent Kingsville and Leamington businesses from beginning to reopen, Brown nonetheless expressed concern about her restaurant's bottom line.

"We'll never get that money back," she said.

Trevor Loop, co-owner of Jacks Gastropub, the Banded Brewing Company and Distinctive Inns of Kingsville, said he's now "desperately seeking governments at all levels to help us with this situation."

"We want a resolution to the problem that's first and foremost and we want it resolved in a safe fashion," he said. "But we need to get open."

Trevor Loop co-owns Jacks Gastropub, the Banded Brewing Company and Distinctive Inns of Kingsville. He says he's now seeking help from all levels of government. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

According to Loop, income generated over the summer season a chunk of which comes from tourism represents approximately 60 per cent of his annual revenue.

Should closures continue, Loop said, many businessesin his community will likely be forced to close.

"We're counting on visitors from Ontario and we were just really starting to make some headway in building our region as a tourism destination," he said. "The wineries were busy, accommodations were busy, we were really anticipating a great summer, and not only are we closed, but we're the last community in North America that's not open because of coronavirus.

Essential businesses also affected by ongoing closures

While restaurants in Kingsville and Leamington are continuing to experience financial difficulty due to the pandemic, even owners of essential businesses that were permitted to stay open say they're experiencing hardship.

Jennifer Flynn, who owns the Grove Hotel, said the issue isn't just money lost due to decreased travel as a result of stay-at-home and other emergency orders. She says her hotel is now also seeing cancellations as a result of other parts of the province and the rest of Canada opening up.

"We have people calling and they'll ask about booking a reservation at a local restaurant, and when we have to tell them we're not at that point then they are always confused," she said.

A woman wearing a black t-shirt standing next to water bottles mounted on a wall
Jennifer Flynn owns the Grove Hotel in Kingsville. Though her business is an essential service and was permitted to remain open throughout the ongoing pandemic, she says reopenings in other regions as well as communities near Kingsville have led to a string of cancellations. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

"It's been a very difficult couple of weeks with the uncertainty of all of that."

Flynn added that, since other communities in Essex County have been given the greenlight to enter Stage 2, there's now a kind of stigma associated with Kingsville and Leamington.

"Windsor's been allowed to open and I 100 per cent support those businesses, because I would be screaming as loud as the next person if that was my business," she said. "But I just feel like we are the only two communities that are left at Stage 1, and it really becomes unfair perception-wise."

With files from Jacob Barker