NIGHTCLUB. Night establishments, closed since December 10 to fight against Covid-19 and the Omicron variant, will be able to reopen on the scheduled date.
[Mis à jour le 14 février à 10h54] Last days without discos for partygoers! It’s time to prepare your best outfits: nightclubs are reopening on Wednesday February 16 next, after weeks of closure to try to stem the tide of Covid-19 and the Omicron variant that swept over France. A date that falls within the schedule for lifting health restrictions announced by the Prime Minister after a press conference on Thursday January 20 at 7 p.m.
As for the health protocol that will be applied in nightclubs from February 16, it remains to be defined. The government has already announced that a vaccination pass would be compulsory at the entrance to night establishments. This Friday, February 11, the Ministry of Health indicates that the mask will no longer be compulsory in closed places subject to the vaccination pass from February 28, with the exception of transport. This is therefore valid for discotheques.
In an attempt to curb the spread of Covid-19 in France, Prime Minister Jean Castex had initially announced the closure of nightclubs for a period of four weeks, from Friday December 10 until Thursday January 6, 2022 inclusive. before extending for another three weeks, pushing the reopening date to January 24. Finally, with this new press conference given by Jean Castex and Olivier Véran this Thursday January 20, the nightclubs will be able to reopen on Wednesday February 16, 2022.
After initially announcing four weeks of closure from December 10, 2021, the government had extended the measure for three additional weeks: from Monday January 3 and therefore, until January 24, 2022 (at least), the nightclubs were to remain closed. Given the health situation, this reopening date seemed premature.
The nightclubs, closed for sixteen months, only reopened on July 9, with a strict protocol. Protocol to which the mask was added again after a speech by the Minister of Health on November 25, 2021. Nightclubs were among the places where the rate of Covid-19 contamination is the highest.
As revealed by the new part of the ComCor study by the Institut Pasteur relayed by The Parisian, private parties, bars and nightclubs stand out as being the most at risk: among those under 40, the risk of contamination increases by 340% (150% among those over 40) compared to a person who does not have not frequented a disco. For comparison, a car trip with other people increases the risk by 30%. It is with this study that the government justifies the closure of nightclubs.
Compulsory before the closing of nightclubs in December, the mask will still be compulsory when night establishments reopen on February 16. This was announced by Olivier Véran and Jean Castex during their press conference, Thursday January 20, 2022 at the end of a new Defense Council. However, a negative test will not be compulsory in addition to the vaccination pass, which will be essential to go dancing.
The mask will no longer be compulsory in closed places subject to the vaccination pass from February 28, announced the Ministry of Health on Friday February 11.
Nightclubs and discos closed in March 2020, in line with government measures taken to stem the coronavirus pandemic in France. If the restaurants, cinemas, museums and theaters had reopened first, just like the libertine clubs or the dance cafés, the managers of the night establishments had waited longer for the green light from the government.
After months of vagueness, the date of July 9 was finally that of the opening, after having been confirmed by the government, Alain Griset, former Minister Delegate in charge of Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises. According to calculations by the SNDLL (National Union of Nightclubs and Leisure Places), of the 1,648 nightclubs in France before the pandemic, 25% were in difficulty when they reopened, and 131 were in liquidation. Only 1,500 nightclubs could have reopened. Their new closure, for nine weeks between December and February 2022, will have been a new blow for the profession.