Time for government to hand ball to business community
It’s time for government to recognize business as a partner in a safe and healthy community. The next few weeks and months are a critical time as vaccination efforts race against the spread of more infectious variants. It’s vital that businesses be consulted now on how to innovate solutions so we can ensure a smooth transition to post-pandemic life.
At some point, the state of emergency must end and the Provincial Health Officer will step away from regulating so much of our daily lives. It will be up to each of us, and, importantly, our business communities to continue the practices we know keep our staff and customers safe.
Government, with its enormous size and available resources, has been essential to backstopping our economy through its darkest hours. Relief programs will continue to play a role as we taxi down the recovery runway and prepare for better times in the years ahead. But it will be the private sector that will allow us to reach our economic capacity and build resilience.
The Greater Victoria Chamber of Commerce and our chamber network, as well as our community partners, are hard at work as your voice of business to forge a new role for business.
Getting government to return to its more traditional role in our lives won’t be a simple process. We can start by increasing the dialogue between the public and private sector and offering the services of a business advisory group. This will help us avoid some of the pain points and the resulting anger and anxiety that comes with misunderstandings. Businesses, especially retailers and hospitality providers, have gone out of their way to find innovative solutions to fight the spread of COVID-19. They’ve listened intently to the directions from our health authorities and have done the right things. From the data and information that has been made available by the B.C. Centre for Disease Control, we know that businesses are generally not the reason we’ve had problematic outbreaks. The few exceptions need to be dealt with — no one disputes that.
However, as a rule, businesses have overwhelmingly earned the trust of the public and, we would like to think, of decision makers in government. A good example of our ongoing advocacy to work closer with government is the April 8 announcement of a Circuit Breaker Business Relief Grant. The program pulled $50 million in unused funds from the province’s Business Recover Grant program, which had a bumpy rollout because of the red tape and arbitrary hurdles that made getting the money more difficult than necessary. When we spoke with the Minster of Jobs, Economic Recovery and Innovation, Ravi Kahlon, he understood our concerns and has been working to free up the funding. It’s not a perfect process, and businesses are still frustrated by bureaucratic decisions. But, if we’ve learned anything from the past year, it is that we are resilient. We’ll keep talking to decision makers and keep offering solutions.
We have been listening to government. It’s time for government to listen to us.
We want the ball because we know, as a business community, we will be called on to reach the next level. Pharmacies are already finding innovative ways to ensure more efficient immunization, and employers have adapted operations that will be with us for months and years to come.
Let’s roll up our sleeves, figuratively and literally, and end this pandemic together.
We want the ball because we know, as a business community, we will be called on to reach the next level. Pharmacies are already finding innovative ways to ensure more efficient immunization, and employers have adapted operations that will be with us for months and years to come.
Let’s roll up our sleeves, figuratively and literally, and end this pandemic together.
Originally published in the April edition of the Business Examiner