If you are staying in a Pattaya hotel - you better read this

Anything and everything about Thailand
User avatar
Gaybutton
Posts: 21550
Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2010 11:21 am
Location: Thailand
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 1314 times

Re: If you are staying in a Pattaya hotel - you better read this

Post by Gaybutton »

gerefan wrote: Sun Jan 31, 2021 1:47 am All the hotels I passed tonight in South Pattaya appear to be operating normally. Even saw signs for short time (only 250 bt) all lit up!
Welcome to my "I Don't Get It" list - or maybe better an 'I don't get what's really going on' list. You observed one thing and the news publishes the opposite.

Is anyone reading this actually staying in a Pattaya hotel? What is the hotel telling you?
___________________________________________________________________________

Chonburi eases curbs; bars allowed to reopen

But hotels ordered closed at their request so that staff can formally seek compensation

By Chaiyot Pupattanapong

30 Jan, 2021

CHONBURI: Authorities have eased Covid-19 restrictions in this eastern province and Pattaya City, with more businesses allowed to resume on Monday, including restaurants, pubs and bars.

The change was made after the area's status was changed from red to orange, where fewer restrictions apply. Similar easing has been approved in a number of other provinces as well.

However, hotels in the province have been ordered closed — at the request of the hard-hit industry so that they and their workers can officially qualify for state financial assistance.

The provincial communicable disease committee, which also has jurisdiction over Pattaya, announced the easing of restrictions on Saturday. Business operators, however, will be required to comply with the Public Health Ministry’s preventive measures.

Schools and other educational institutions will also be allowed to reopen, with standard measures such as mask-wearing, social distancing and hand washing in place. The number of students per classroom must be limited to 25.

Restaurants, pubs, bars and karaoke shops are allowed to stay open until 11pm. Convenience stores must close between 11pm and 5am.

Activities with more than 300 people are still not allowed. Officials will be sent to conduct health screening tests at entertainment venues every 14 days. Screening checkpoints at 17 locations in the province have been scrapped, but movements of migrant workers are still prohibited.

The governor of Chonburi signed the hotel-closure order on Thursday, at the request of industry associations. If the hotels had closed voluntarily, they would not be eligible for compensation. With the formal order in place, hotel staff can now seek up to 3 months of unemployment benefits from the Social Security Office.

The Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration approved the closure.

Operators were asked to provide assistance to employees in a bid to encourage them not to travel outside the province.

Any hotels that still have guests in residence or want to stay open could make a special request to authorities in their district, according to the order.

Chonburi has seen no new coronavirus cases since Jan 21. It has reported one death and 648 cases in total, with four remaining in hospitals.

https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/ge ... -to-reopen
Up2u

Re: If you are staying in a Pattaya hotel - you better read this

Post by Up2u »

Looks like hotels simply have to make a business decision whether it pays to stay open. With domestic travel permitted again I think many will. A friend leaves Monday for a holiday in Koh Chang.

"Any hotels that still have guests in residence or want to stay open could make a special request to authorities in their district, according to the order."
User avatar
Gaybutton
Posts: 21550
Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2010 11:21 am
Location: Thailand
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 1314 times

Re: If you are staying in a Pattaya hotel - you better read this

Post by Gaybutton »

Up2u wrote: Sun Jan 31, 2021 8:04 am Looks like hotels simply have to make a business decision whether it pays to stay open.
What this whole bizarre thing is all about is if the hotels close under orders from the authorities, the staff gets government unemployment compensation. If the hotel closes on its own, the staff gets nothing.

I would expect the hotels that remain open have enough guests to be able to pay their staff, which would be much more than unemployment compensation.

To my mind, the logical thing for the government to do would be to offer unemployment compensation to anyone, whether hotel staff or some other work, who loses their job through no fault of their own. But in Thailand it just doesn't work that way.
Post Reply