BusinessLocal News Restaurants on slippery path by Barbados Today 05/03/2020 written by Barbados Today 05/03/2020 4 min read A+A- Reset Share FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 358 Amid the sudden and controversial closure of three local restaurants, a veteran in the industry says the current business climate could leave his establishment in a similar position if resources are not managed with caution. Kenneth Evelyn, the owner of Naru Restaurant and Lounge at Hastings and Miso by Naru at Coverley, Christ Church says a sharp decrease in client spend since the 2017/2018 tourist season has often left his restaurants operating in the red. He was responding to the recent closure of Chaps Restaurants Limited which left 149 employees on the breadline when it closed the doors of Cin Cin by the Sea, Hugoโs Barbados and Primo Bar and Bistro. The measure was taken without prior notice to staff with top management citing a falloff in visitor spend and unfair taxation policies as the main reasons for its closure. But while some have accused Chapsโ Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Joanne Pooler of withholding the โrealโ reasons for the companyโs decision, Evelyn who has 50 years in the business says the local climate has not been favourable to stand-alone restaurants. โA lot of people believe the restaurant business has a lot of money and a lot of profits in it, but with the exception of a few top-class restaurants and a few from previous eras that have since closed down you realise that we donโt get the types of sales and the types of spend that they get,โ Evelyn told Barbados TODAY. โIโve seen it from all angles and it is not easy. You have to be at the top of your game every single day of your life. If youโre not on top of it, exactly what happened to them will happen to me,โ he added. You Might Be Interested In Crystal Beckles-Holder, 2nd runner up in regional competition GUYANA: Body of child found after gold mine collapses Barbadians asked to help with return tickets for Haitians According to Evelyn, times are so tough that his company has been forced to negotiate a โslightโ reduction in rent, while cutting back on utility costs and human resources, particularly in the low season. His perspective offers a sharp contrast to that of Chiryl Newman, the owner of Champers, a high-end South Coast restaurant. On Monday, she suggested that the situation is not as dire as Chaps has claimed. โThere must have been other factors at play that would have brought him to that point because you canโt just wake up one morning and decide you are going to close the businessโฆThere is business out there on the south coast. I canโt say that everybody is doing brilliantly and bursting at the doors but there is business out there,โ Newman said on Down to Brass Tacks. โIn the U.K and the U.S, you have VAT at 22 per cent and he [the owner of Chaps] would have been at a reduced rate of ten per cent along with the product levy at 2.5 per cent. Now this year with the reduced corporation tax, his tax level would have been reduced to five per cent. So you have to ask what else is going on in those businesses,โ she argued. The owner of Naru, on the other hand, contends that the number of โheadsโ at a restaurant on any given night, is no guarantee of profits. โThe last time we saw a good spend with the number of heads would have been around 2017/2018 when we had a pretty fantastic year. Since then we have seen a massive decline in the spend,โ Evelyn disclosed. โThe summer months are so bad that when the busy period comes around and you do clear off some debts, youโre back into the red again. It is something I believe the government will have to look at when it comes to these duty-free concessions which allow hotels and hotel restaurants to lower their prices. โItโs a big burden on us as well and I donโt know how much longer we can bear it. The Government said they would look at stand-alone restaurants and we havenโt seen anything, so I donโt know where they stand today,โ he told Barbados TODAY. Given his location on the South Coast, the veteran businessman added that the burden of declining sales has been exacerbated by more than $500,000 in losses because of the south coast sewage crisis. โWe were hoping for good seasons to recover it faster, but we havenโt seen that. We were trying to get compensation but they wouldnโt even entertain itโฆ and when the dirty water came off of the streets that discussion died a natural death as things usually happen in Barbados,โ he added. Evelyn started with a restaurant on Broad Street in 1970 and moved to various hotels before establishing Naru where he employs 22 staff. But he has not stopped there recently placing his capital behind Miso by Naru at Coverley with 14 workers which he says has been doing reasonably well. โYou canโt just sit down on your laurels and do nothing. You have to work on this on a daily basis. As a manager/owner/investor, you have to know where you are going on a daily basis because a restaurant can shut you down in a month,โ he said. kareemsmith@barbadostoday.bb Barbados Today Stay informed and engaged with our digital news platform. The leading online multimedia news resource in Barbados for news you can trust. You may also like Responsible governance key after landslide win, says clergyman 22/02/2026 Man due in court on affray, firearm charges 22/02/2026 Christ Church man to be sentenced in March for unlicensed firearm, ammo 22/02/2026