Australasian Leisure Management Issue 145 2021

Page 56

Fitness business owner Mel Tempest

Challenges and

Opportunities Health club owner and business leader Mel Tempest assesses the contradiction of overseas interest in Australian fitness at a time of unprecedented stress

C

oronavirus lockdowns over the past 16 months have created unprecedented suffering for the operators of fitness businesses with untold amounts of revenue gone, some operators closing their doors for good and the mental health and physical health of our members wiped out. Of all states, Victoria has, until now, been most impacted - enduring six lockdowns that have resulted in an almost broken industry, with business owners living day to day, with no cashflow, borrowing money where they can, with overdrafts and credit cards maxed out. Increasingly, there is not a day that passes where I don’t receive a call from a distressed business owner explaining their plight. After the fourth lockdown was introduced, Tim Schleiger, spokesperson for VIC Active - the industry lobby group formed 56 Australasian Leisure Management Issue 145

to back fitness operators during the COVID-19 crisis - called the ongoing lockdowns “a monumental kick in the guts to all Victorians.” VIC Active has taken a proactive role in meeting with Government, highlighting that fitness centres are COVID-19 Safe and must reopen if Victoria is to avoid a physical and mental health catastrophe and lobbying for the industry to not be the first to be closed and last to be reopened during lockdowns. Despite academically and scientifically collected evidence showing that fitness centres are COVID-19 Safe, the sector has been consistently overlooked, so much so that, during easing measures in early June, brothels were allowed to reopen under similar conditions to those that apply for gyms, aquatic facilities and entertainment venues! With harsh lockdown measures being applied to Melbourne often also extending to regional Victoria, even when there are no active cases outside the Victorian capital, I believe operators in regional Victoria need stronger representation to try and secure a rescue package for the industry from the Federal and Victorian Governments. The Federal/State Government needs to come to the industry’s rescue with a national relief package. Without it, the industry will shut down and this will cost us all in the long run as without new financial support clubs will close, mental health problems and suicide will increase, chronic illness will grow, and our health care system will crumble under the already existing strain. The fitness industry is more than a selfie on Instagram and the days of steel plates dropping in clubs are gone. We need to eliminate this poor image and promote what and who we are, ‘a lifeline for many’ and we need new representation and the fitness professionals of today to stand up to represent the next generations, so they have an industry to go to. Associations have done what they can, but it’s not enough to get us across the line. I have repeatedly engaged with Victorian politicians and have gained the support of opposition state members Louise Staley and David Hodgett who have thrown their support behind the fitness industry. But wait … Remarkably, despite the lockdowns and restrictions that the industry is facing, not only in Victoria but also across the rest of the country, that hasn’t stopped the high interest of foreign brands making their way to these shores.


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