Face masks to remain compulsory at Borough Market

Borough Market officials said its research found a ‘clear majority’ of visitors are in favour of the move.
Borough Market will continue to tell its shoppers to wear face masks despite restrictions easing next week (Jonathan Brady/PA)
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Isobel Frodsham16 July 2021

Customers and traders at Borough Market will have to continue wearing face masks next week despite restrictions being eased by the Government

The historic food market, which contains produce stalls and restaurants, said it will be enforcing mask-wearing under by-laws passed by its Trustees.

The decision comes after it surveyed visitors this week and found a “clear majority” are “in favour of mask-wearing beyond the Government’s lifting of restrictions” in England next Monday.

Shoppers and traders at Borough Market will continue wearing face coverings (Jonathan Brady/PA)
PA Archive

People will be able to remove face masks while eating and drinking in the market’s hot food areas, which is the case under the current rules in restaurants and bars.

It echoes the decision made by London Mayor Sadiq Khan that travellers on the capital’s transport network must continue to wear masks from next week and beyond.

Borough Market managing director Darren Henaghan said: “It was important for us to understand how our customers felt, and the clear message we received was that they want masks to stay for the time being.

“We have a responsibility to provide a safe and comfortable environment where the public can shop with confidence, so this is the right thing to do.

“Our traders, who will also continue to wear masks, support this move as well.”

In January, the market became the first outdoor retail venue in the UK to make face masks compulsory.

Meanwhile, Spitalfields in east London said masks will not need to be worn in the outdoor market itself but the shops within it can ask customers to wear masks inside if they wish.

A spokeswoman for Spitalfields told the PA news agency: “In the market itself, they are going to follow Government guidelines. If the Government is saying ‘No, you don’t need them inside’, then they won’t make it mandatory. For the actual restaurants and shops that run around the edge, that will be at the discretion of those companies.”

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