Cafes reopen outside the Mount Maunganui landslip area as recovery efforts continue. Photo / Corey Fleming
Cafes reopen outside the Mount Maunganui landslip area as recovery efforts continue. Photo / Corey Fleming
A business within the Mount Maugnanui landslide cordon says it has lost up to $60,000 while closed for the past week.
The owner of the Coffee Club Mount Maunganui has spoken out as Marine Parade cafes reopened on Wednesday after being closed since last Thursday’s deadly slip at Mount MaunganuiBeachside Holiday Park.
The victims of the landslide were named as Lisa Anne Maclennan, 50, Måns Loke Bernhardsson, 20, Jacqualine Suzanne Wheeler, 71, Susan Doreen Knowles, 71, Sharon Maccanico, 15, and Max Furse-Kee, 15.
Kim encouraged the Government and council to “move fast for hospitality workers”.
She suggested wage subsidies similar to the relief provided during Covid-19.
The cafe had offered tables, chairs, coffee and muffins to first responders, but they already had plenty at the scene.
Beach Hut Cafe and Lital Cafe owner Michelle Richardson said if the community could do one thing for everybody, it would be to keep the Marine Parade cafes going.
“It’s not just these businesses that need support; by supporting these cafes, you’re supporting our suppliers.
Regular customers at Mount Break Cafe Graeme Sterne, Diane Sterne, Carol Tidmarsh, and Philippa McKnight. Photo / Bijou Johnson
Mount Break regular customer and local resident Graeme Sterne said Mauao was “the heart of things here”.
“It’s a taonga [treasure]. It’s precious ... It’s a loss of something that’s really precious to a lot of people.
“On top of that, you’ve got the people who have passed away, then watching the trucks coming and going, the ambulances and service people walking around with lanyards – it’s a heavy feeling for all of us to carry."
He and his friends, who meet every morning at Mount Break and sit at the same table, needed to process the tragedy together.
And now, with the cafes reopening, “it feels like a shaft of light has come back”.
Bijou Johnson is a multimedia journalist based in the Bay of Plenty. A passionate writer and reader, she grew up in Tauranga and developed a love for journalism while exploring various disciplines at university. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Classical Studies from Massey University.