LONDON - Britain's major supermarkets are working on plans to streamline their operations by cutting cafes, counters and other services to enable a depleted workforce to maintain basic provisions during the coronavirus outbreak, industry sources told Reuters.
The country's supermarket sector, including market leader Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda and Morrisons , have struggled for over a week to keep shelves stocked as shoppers panic bought items like dried pasta, canned food, flour, toilet rolls and hand sanitiser.
But executives are now working on plans on how to keep the stores running if large numbers of their staff become ill or if the outbreak forces the closure of schools, which would escalate workers' child care needs.
"What (products) we can and can't get is the least of current challenges," one UK supermarket executive told Reuters.
The person said far more pressing problems were how the business staffs its stores and how it practically helps the elderly and vulnerable when the virus takes hold of the UK population.
The government announcing the closure of all schools would be "a binary moment", the person added.
Another source at a UK supermarket group said planning was focused on "What would it take to keep the store running?"