The Australian Hotels Association and Tourism Accommodation Australia have renewed calls to the Federal Government for targeted, temporary assistance for the hospitality, tourism and accommodation sectors post-JobKeeper.

The AHA has written to Prime Minister Scott Morrison outlining the dire situation facing the sector and asked assistance be urgently considered by National Cabinet.

Mr Ferguson said the AHA is asking for:

  • Businesses whose activities are directly limited by public health orders, and whose gross revenue has been less than 70% over the last four consecutive quarters compared to the prior year, to receive a cash boost payment equivalent to the PAYG
  • tax withheld from wages for all employees. Or alternatively, receive $500 per (full time equivalent) employee per week.
  • For the Commonwealth to work with state and territory governments to individually consider further relief packages including tourism, hospitality and accommodation vouchers, but also direct relief aimed at issues including land tax, payroll tax etc.

“There’s no doubt the end of JobKeeper will create unnecessary hardship for those businesses upon which governments have imposed temporary, targeted restrictions to limit the gathering and movement of people to help save Australian lives,” Mr Ferguson said.

“...But the fact remains that while keeping us all safe, these limitations come at tremendous cost to business owners and workers ...Given the vaccine rollout is predicted to be completed in about six months, what we are asking for are targeted, temporary measures of support…

"It is vital in the intervening period our businesses survive and be able to retain their skilled employees so we are there on the other side of the pandemic - now is not the time to pull the drawbridge up on those still on the road to recovery.”

Tourism Accommodation Australia CEO Michael Johnson said accommodation hotels in the major CBDs in particular were desperate for help until the vaccine rollout was complete.

“Hotels in the major CBDs of Sydney and Melbourne have occupancy rates below 35% and are really struggling to retain skilled staff,” Mr Johnson said.

Mr Ferguson said a recent ABS report, drawing on the Tax Office’s single-touch payroll system over the week to 27 February, showed there were still 110,000, or 12 per cent, fewer pay-rolled employees in hotels, restaurants and cafes than before the pandemic hit early last year.

Only two in three hospitality jobs had been re-gained by the end of last month, the ABS reported.

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