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Shut out of business for two years, Crooks sells Tobago apartments - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

The covid19 pandemic has delivered a tremendous blow to the business community for well over a year.

The tourism industry has taken the biggest blow owing to the restrictions against international and domestic travel to curb the spread of the virus.

Even as vaccines are being administered and Chief Secretary Ancil Dennis professed that there is some "light at the end of the tunnel," some businesses won't see the light.

Tobago businessman Ronnie Ryan Crooks on Wednesday confirmed to Newsday that he has sold his Crown Point-based Crooks apartments to a local buyer.

Crooks, 61, said financial challenges made the decision to sell an easy one.

"It is not a hard decision if you've been shut out of business for two years.

"I'm getting older – I'm not getting younger. Somebody younger has to be able to handle the trials and tribulations of trying to maintain and conduct business in TT.

"I'm done putting a line in the water to catch a customer. If I was younger, I would have been willing to take the challenge on again, because I know the possibility."

Crooks, born in Trinidad, said he grew up in New York before moving to Tobago to take up property his grandfather left him.

He owned the apartments for 22 years.

He said the economic blow caused by the pandemic and the unreasonable demands of the banks, left him with little choice.

"It's a matter of a number of things.

"We're trying to stay afloat. I thought the banks were gonna work with us. (Bank name called) has not held the line when it comes to customers, to try to allow them to survive this pandemic. They constantly giving you calls about loans (in arrears). You have to find other options and alternatives in order to find your way.

"Here's the trick: they want you, although it's a pandemic and you can't conduct business, if you have a high amount of money you have to pay back, if you go into any kind of arrears, they're not offering you any assistance – although the reason you're in arrears is legitimate and right in front of your face."

He added, "If you're a month in arrears, two months, (the bank is) not giving you an opportunity to get right – because you're in arrears."

Crooks said banks are not showing compassion in this difficult economic climate.

"That's why the government is offering the moratorium – to allow you to float on this heavy sea. They feel you can make money out of thin air."

He believes the Government should take more decisive action to support business owners.

"They should mandate it. They leaving it up to these financial institutions who only thinking about money. They 're not thinking about helping you. They're thinking that you may have a valuable property that we can foreclose on and they can sell it to somebody else in these kinds of times."

[caption id="attachment_895559" align="alignnone" width="703"] Businessman Ronnie Ryan Crooks. -[/caption]

Although Tobago hotels and small properties benefited from a $50 million grant for upgrades, Crooks said he did not access any funding.

"I took the guarantee

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