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The restricted non-essential products section in Dunness Stores in Newsbridge, Co Kildare RollingNews.ie

Explainer: What exactly are the rules for essential and non-essential retailers and how can they be enforced?

What penalties are in place for businesses that break the rules?

This article was originally published on Tuesday 27 October but has been updated to include the comments made by Minister of State Damien English last night.

HAVING REOPENED THEIR doors to customers over the summer months, many non-essential retailers have had to drop the shutters once again after the government’s move to Level 5 of the ‘Living with Covid’ plan last week.

Last night, Damien English, the Minister of State for Employment Affairs and Retail Businesses was pressed on the essential/non-essential distinction on RTÉ’s Prime Time programme.

Asked by Miriam O’Callaghan if children’s socks were essential, he said that socks fall under the category of clothes and are therefore non-essential items.

The Meath West TD said that “the whole aim is to discourage the movement of people as much as we possibly can”.

So what exactly do the current rules say; what items and retailers are considered essential and non-essential and what are the penalties for businesses that don’t follow the restrictions?

Let’s take a look.

What’s the current situation?

We should all be familiar with it by now.

Essential retailers — supermarkets, hardware shops, pharmacies etc — are permitted to keep their doors open to customers during the Level 5 restrictions which are to remain in place until early December.

Non-essential retailers — homeware shops, clothes shops, toy shops and the like — are only allowed to remain open if they offer online delivery or ‘click/phone and collect’ services.

Even then, customers aren’t allowed into the shop except to collect their items and only if they live within the 5km limit.

That means no browsing or trying on items in a non-essential retail outlet until, all going to plan, early December.

Sounds fairly straightforward. What’s the issue?

There are two issues actually, both of which revolve around questions of competition and fairness.

Some non-essential retailers have complained that some of their competitors, many of them larger in size, are able to continue selling non-essential items, taking advantage of the fact that smaller shops have had to close their doors to customers.

For example, toy shops are only allowed to operate click and collect or delivery services for the next weeks. Meanwhile, supermarkets, many of which also happen to sell toys, can remain open to customers.

If the supermarket continued selling toys, that would be an unfair advantage, or so the argument goes.

The second issue is that some high-profile but definitely non-essential retailers have reportedly expanded their range of goods in a bid to stay open to customers.

While most non-essential shops have had to clampdown on walk-in customer visits, some of their larger competitors have actually stocked up on ‘essential’ goods and started selling them.

What do the government guidelines say?

In relation to the first problem mentioned above, the guidelines are pretty cut and dry.

Where retailers offer a mix of essential and non-essential goods for sale, the business is required to “make arrangements for the separation” of the non-essential section.

That’s why if you’ve taken a trip to one of the larger supermarkets recently, you’ve probably seen the clothes or the toys section cordoned off.

The second problem identified is a bit trickier.

There’s really nothing in the guidelines to prohibit non-essential retailers stocking up on and selling essential items during Level 5.

This is, of course, provided the sale of essential goods is not being used as a way to funnel customers into the store so they can buy non-essential goods.

Again, if that what’s going on, the rules are fairly cut and dry.

For example, last weekend, the Mike Ashley-owned chain SportsDirect was accused of ramping up sales of PPE in order to continue operating during Level 5.

However, a spokesperson for the company told The Irish Times that its outlets were only selling “essential items” and that ”all non-essential products have been moved to the back of the shop and/or are cordoned off from customers”.

How are the rules enforced?

Gardaí can carry out inspections of businesses to ensure compliance and, in extreme cases, bring criminal charges against offending businesses for that purpose.

The regulations are laid out a statutory instrument, which came into force on 22 October.

That instrument provides for the “carrying on or provision of certain businesses and services” subject to a range of conditions.

Crucially, access to the general public is prohibited except in the case “where the premises is used to provide an essential service, provided that such access is granted, or otherwise permitted, only to such part of the premises as is operating solely to provide the essential service”.

In other words, as explained above, that means in-store purchases of non-essential items are strictly verboten until the regulations expire in December.

In response to a query from TheJournal.ie, a garda spokesperson said that this is “a penal regulation”, which means it can be enforced through fines and criminal charges.

However, the spokesperson said, gardaí will only use enforcement “as a last resort”.

Have gardaí had to ‘enforce’ the rules?

According to the gardaí, yes — but details are thin on the ground.

“An Garda Síochána has and continues to carry out inspections on business premises to ensure compliance with public health guidelines and regulations,” the spokesperson said.

However, the spokesperson added the gardaí will not be providing data on enforcement “on a daily or individual basis but will provide data in an aggregated form when appropriate”.  

How widespread are these breaches?

It’s difficult to say, really.

If you’re abiding by the regulations to the letter, you’re probably not taking many trips to the shops, meaning eyewitness accounts are in short supply.

However, the issues are serious enough that, on foot complaints from their members, lobby groups Retail Excellence Ireland and ISME have raised concerns about them in the last week.

Tánaiste and business minister Leo Varadkar also addressed the second issue in an interview on RTÉ Radio at the weekend.

“If you’re selling essential products, that’s one thing,” he said.

“If you’re trying to use essential products as a means of opening your store to sell non-essential products, that’s not okay, that’s not lawful, and we will bring an enforcement action and it’s also unfair.” 

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    Mute Siobhán Mooney
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    Jul 14th 2016, 2:11 PM

    Good for them. I hope that they and their pupils don’t suffer in spite of the violence.

    193
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    Mute stevenocarroll
    Favourite stevenocarroll
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    Jul 14th 2016, 4:22 PM

    Nuns and priests have been doing this since start of christianity no matter how much the media want to portray the 2-3% pedos who deliberately sought out positions of influence over children and the sinful corrupt hierarchy as being christian or the norm of the rest of the 97-98% decent christian church.

    135
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    Mute Conor Brady
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    Jul 14th 2016, 4:49 PM

    1 in 10 priests in most major cities investigated Steven, not 2-3%. Thousands and thousands of kids with major top down disregard when the information was brought forth. But fair play to these nuns. That’s what it’s supposed to about. We have a nun in the family and we love her dearly, a purer, more lovely person you could not meet.

    27
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    Mute Patrick J O'CONNOR
    Favourite Patrick J O'CONNOR
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    Jul 14th 2016, 9:18 PM

    @Conor Brady…………Investigated! Nebulous remark. Try something with more credibility to it such as below and link to more.
    -
    …”Written By Bob Allen
    The Associated Press reported recently that three insurance companies receive upward of 260 reports each year of young people under 18 being sexually abused by Protestant clergy, challenging the assumption that clergy sexual abuse is an exclusively Catholic problem that does not take place in other churches.

    That is a higher number than the annual average of 228 “credible accusations” brought against Catholic clerics in records reported by the Catholic Church in response to media scrutiny, a priest observed in a Fox News commentary questioning why the story isn’t garnering more attention….”
    https://www.facebook.com/notes/leonard-alt/147-protestant-clergy-abuse-equals-or-exceeds-catholic-clergy-abuse/431640530219229/

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    Mute stevenocarroll
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    Jul 14th 2016, 10:00 PM

    @Conor Brady

    “Pedophilia (the sexual abuse of a prepubescent child) among priests is extremely rare, affecting only 0.3% of the entire population of clergy. This figure, cited in the book Pedophiles and Priests by non-Catholic scholar, Philip Jenkins, is from the most comprehensive study to date, which found that only one out of 2,252 priests considered over a thirty-year period was afflicted with pedophilia. In the recent Boston scandal, only four of the more than eighty priests labeled by the media as “pedophiles” are actually guilty of molesting young children.”
    Source: non-Catholic scholar, Philip Jenkins

    “advocates for the victims of clerical sex abuse continue to argue that the church plays down the true scale of the problem. Barbara Dorris, outreach director of the Survivors’ Network of those Abused by Priests, said on Sunday that BishopAccountability.org, a website that attempts to document abuse cases and apparent cover-ups, had figures suggesting that the proportion of US priests accused of abuse from 1950 until 2013 was about 5.6%.”

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    Mute Joe Phillips
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    Jul 14th 2016, 3:05 PM

    People like this are the reason the world is still worth caring about

    131
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    Mute liam
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    Jul 14th 2016, 3:07 PM

    I am not a fan of the religious orders but fair dues to those nuns

    103
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    Mute Shawn Rahoon
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    Jul 14th 2016, 2:36 PM

    Woman of Ireland, your glory’s in the shade.

    71
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    Mute rewop
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    Jul 14th 2016, 6:11 PM

    All the red thumb liberal brigade should ask themselves if they would sacrifice their personal pinko safety for others like these nuns. These women are part of a proud real Irish legacy and real socialism

    68
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    Mute Patrick J O'CONNOR
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    Jul 14th 2016, 9:20 PM

    I am proud of them.They deserve every support from our Govt. to ensure their safety.

    38
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    Mute Melissa OHara
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    Jul 14th 2016, 11:43 PM

    I was very lucky to have known Orla in my college days and she was a fantastic, funny, very intelligent and extremely caring person back then. It seems her selflessness has only grown. Imagine being here safe in your home country with your family and doing everything you can to get back to a war torn country to help others?! I am in awe of this woman and those that work with her. Good luck to them. My prayers, for what they are worth, are with you.

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    Mute Jonathan McKee
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    Jul 14th 2016, 2:09 PM

    Very noble but with all the money we spend in that region of the world i would have thought hunger was last on the list ?

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    Mute stevenocarroll
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    Jul 14th 2016, 4:24 PM

    Europeans have spent trillions helping the 3rd world, we have let millions, the most able the least poor into our countries on the basis of false emotional blackmail, while the most wretched and downtrodden are still in Africa, yet somehow it is never, never enough, and the white man is still racist. #BlackLivesMatter

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    Mute Tariq ibn Ziyad
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    Jul 14th 2016, 2:50 PM

    Those girls won’t brainwash themselves I suppose.

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    Mute Foghorn Leghorn
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    Jul 14th 2016, 3:00 PM

    Before anyone is tempted to reply, don’t feed the troll. They grow stronger with your attention. Yes I’m aware of the irony in this comment

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    Mute Odhran MacMurchadha
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    Jul 14th 2016, 4:18 PM

    Yet you managed it all on your own Tariq.

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    Mute EmmaQ@gmail.com
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    Jul 15th 2016, 8:20 AM

    As an Athiest I fully support the irish nuns presence, the indoctrination of the poor uneducated and helpless into the peaceful religion of Christianity is the best defence against the spread of the Islamic Cult.

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    Mute B-Egan
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    Jul 14th 2016, 2:38 PM

    Iran and North Korea left for the central Bankers and its mission complete. South Sudanese had the misfortune of not having a central bank controlled by the private banking Cabal. They will have one when the blood letting is done and more innocent people have been wiped out due to criminal bankers.

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    Mute Foghorn Leghorn
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    Jul 14th 2016, 3:04 PM

    Cool story bro

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    Mute Steve McMahon
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    Jul 14th 2016, 2:30 PM

    There’s still nuns

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    Mute stevenocarroll
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    Jul 14th 2016, 4:27 PM

    Interesting observation.

    My own powers of observation lead me to conclude in addition, they are not Imams.

    35
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