BHG at Bugis Junction to be closed till Monday
Closure extended to enable deep cleaning after 38 cases added to cluster
The BHG department store in Bugis Junction will be closed to the public until Monday to break the chain of transmission and enable deep cleaning, the Ministry of Health (MOH) said yesterday.
The store was first closed for a day on Tuesday after a member of its staff tested positive for Covid-19. The extension comes after another 38 cases were added to the cluster yesterday, taking the total to 61.
MOH on Tuesday announced 20 new infections linked to the shopping mall.
BHG first announced the store closure on its Facebook page on Tuesday, saying its staff member had tested positive the day before.
"We have since informed all staff who had been in close contact to self-quarantine and undergo swab tests," BHG said.
A spokesman for Bugis Junction said the mall has "taken the necessary environmental cleaning measures in accordance with the authority's guidelines". They include increasing the frequency of cleaning common touchpoints and enhancing air circulation in the mall by conducting daily air purging and fully opening air dampers to maximise outdoor air intake.
Businesses in the mall saw slower sales yesterday. "Usually, by 3pm, we would have already sold 100 cups of tea. Today, we sold only 40," said Ms Lee Su Teng, 21, a saleswoman at ShareTea, which is at an open area near BHG.
Some shops remain hopeful that the footfall will pick up.
"Bugis Junction is quite popular, so (it) having a cluster is a sooner or later thing. I think other malls will face this problem as well," said a store owner, who would give his name only as Ken. "It is no big deal. Nowadays, a lot of places are closing down because of the virus. I think Westgate was closed twice - even Jewel also got it."
Staff working in the mall are taking things in their stride.
Ms Koong Wei Heong, who works at Ya Kun Kaya Toast, said: "We are feeling pretty calm because we get tested every two weeks. We were just tested on Aug 20."
Ms Koong was referring to the fast and easy test (FET) workers in higher-risk settings, like dine-in eateries, have to undergo every 14 days. The FET regime can include antigen rapid tests.
She added that she is waiting to find out if she needs a swab test as well, following the emergence of the cluster linked to the mall.
"Not many people visited the mall today. They are probably afraid after hearing news of the cluster," said Ms Koong.
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