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Widespread Panic Is About to Make Red Rocks History

Widespread Panic Is About to Make Red Rocks History
westword.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from westword.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

If tourists don t come, I don t make money : Shops in Old Montreal say reopening plan does nothing for them

Posted: May 27, 2021 1:14 PM ET | Last Updated: May 27 Shops that cater to tourists in Old Montreal are struggling to stay afloat without visitors from other countries and provinces.(Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press) It s Thursday, and Jerry Joseph s art shop at Marché Bonsecours in Old Montreal has yet to make a single sale this week. Same goes for Nick Corraya, who has owned a souvenir shop on Saint-Paul Street East for 39 years. For 14 months, the downtown core has essentially been deserted. That should change over the next two weeks as the province prepares to lift several public health restrictions. As of tomorrow, the curfew will be a thing of the past and people will be able to eat outdoors on restaurant terrasses. Indoor dining in Montreal and Laval is expected to be allowed as of June 7, though that could change.  

With sales down 95 per cent, Montreal souvenir shop owners hope tourists return | iNFOnews

Morgan Lowrie Mohamed Ghodhbane, owner of Noor Souvenirs poses at his store in Old Montreal, Monday, May 24, 2021. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes May 25, 2021 - 9:01 AM MONTREAL - The shelves of Mohamed Ghodhbane s souvenir shop in Old Montreal are full of the kinds of merchandise found in tourist-friendly places the world over: T-shirts, shot glasses, key chains, snow globes and novelty licence plates. For more than a year now, he s hardly been selling any of it. While COVID-19 has devastated many sectors of the economy, few have been harder hit than the souvenir shop owners in Montreal s Old Port, who depend almost entirely on a flow of tourists that has dried up.

With sales down 95 per cent, Montreal souvenir shop owners hope tourists return

While COVID-19 has devastated many sectors of the economy, few have been harder hit than the souvenir shop owners in Montreal s Old Port, who depend almost entirely on a flow of tourists that has dried up. Ghodhbane, who estimates his business is down 95 per cent, said he s trying to stay upbeat. It’s a little bit difficult these days, but we’re hoping for the best, said Ghodhbane, who has run Noor Souvenirs for 15 years. With the advancement of vaccines, the opening of the border, we think it will be OK. We keep up hope. Along the cobblestoned streets of Rue St-Paul, other merchants tell a similar story. Four souvenir shop owners or employees who spoke to The Canadian Press all said their sales have declined by between 90 and 95 per cent.

Sans touristes, les boutiques de souvenirs de Montréal perdent 95 % de leurs ventes

Sans touristes, les boutiques de souvenirs de Montréal perdent 95 % de leurs ventes
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