New Delhi:Hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic, owners of around 3,000 budget hotels and guest houses in the national capital had to let go more than 75 per cent of their staff and are now staring at bankruptcy with unpaid bills running into lakhs, umbrella groups representing them have claimed.
So severe is the situation that the president of Delhi Hotel and Restaurant Owners Association, Sandeep Khandelwal, claims he himself was being unable to pay his house rent.
Even though the Centre had allowed hotels across the country to open their doors to customers from June 8, the Delhi government did not do so considering a large number of COVID-19 cases in that month.
With Delhi witnessing a significant improvement in the COVID-19 situation in July end, the Arvind Kejriwal government last Thursday allowed hotels to resume "normal functioning".
But that was not to be as Delhi Lieutenant Governor Anil Baijal the next day vetoed the decision, saying the situation continues to be "fragile" and the threat is still "far from over".
Khandelwal said over four lakh people depend on hotels, guest houses and restaurants for their livelihood directly or indirectly.
"The establishments have remained closed since March 15. Most of the employees have returned to their villages. A few remain to look after the premises. They, too, are not being paid their full salaries," he said.
Khandelwal, who runs Hotel Grand Imperial in Karol Bagh on a lease, claimed that he has not been able to pay its rent for the last four months.
"I pay Rs 7 lakh as rent for the property. Of the 20 employees working at the hotel before lockdown, only three remain. Around 50 families depend on the hotel directly or indirectly," he said.
The association's president said he hasn't been able to earn enough to pay his house rent and car loan EMI. "I represent the budget hotels and look at the situation I am in. Others are in a much worse condition."
Khandelwal claimed that hotel and guest house owners are being "forced" to pay hefty water and power bills, even though there has been "zero business" in the last four months. According to him, many hotel owners have taken loans from their friends and family members to stay afloat.