*Colm McGuinness at Calvin Arthur Barbers in Ballycasey, Shannon.ย
Style needs to be sacrificed for the greater good as attempts are made to flatten the curve of Covid-19 spreading with a Shannon hairdresser encouraging people to avoid cutting their hair and instead save lives.
Colm McGuinness owns and runs two outlets in Shannon, Calvin Arthur Barbers in Ballycasey and Scoundrelโs Chop Shop in SkyCourt Shopping Centre. A total of seven people are employed between the two barber shops and were informed of the decision to temporarily close shortly before his announcement on March 12th, the same day in which Taoiseach Leo Varadkar announced the closures of schools and colleges.
โI think I was the first barbershop in the country to close. I have a big network of people all across Ireland who have different barbershops, I didnโt see anyone seeing they were closing until Monday. Everyone seems to be jumping on board now, I could see where we were heading,โ Colm told The Clare Echo.
Although no directive was issued to him at the time, McGuinness felt the proactive call was in the best interests of the people of Shannon and surrounding areas. โPersonally I felt with the recommendations of social distancing, with the job we have we are right up in peopleโs faces, if youโre doing somebodyโs beard there is no social distancing because youโre right in their face and breathing space. Iโm fully booked everyday in Calvin Arthurโs and my other shop is very busy, the chairs would be full the whole timeโ.
He added, โIf I was to get it I wouldnโt know if I had for up to ten or fourteen days you could have none or mild symptoms so there was a risk that I would have hundreds of people coming in and Iโd be spreading it and that causes a chain reaction, itโs a different group of people spreading it onto different people. I saw my businesses as a potential spreader of the virus, although Shannon didnโt have any cases I still felt if it was there and we didnโt know then I would be spreading it around and I didnโt want to do thatโ.
During the seven years of operating Calvin Arthur Barbers and the five of Scoundrelโs, Colm has noticed an extra emphasis men place on their hair. To avoid becoming a carrier and passing coronavirus onto elderly relatives, he has urged young people to let their hair grow. โPeople love their style now especially with the foil fade, you have it a week and then itโs a different hair cut, they love the look of the foil fade, it doesnโt last. A lot of people in the past would have come in for really short hair cuts because they felt it would last longer, shave it all off and it would do me for a few months, now itโs more shave it for the look so people are coming in more frequently for fades definitely and they will be panicking and hating the fact they canโt get their fade in.
โIโm sure there will be a lot of home cutting going on but Iโm just hoping people can be responsible and put off having a haircut for a while, relax about your style and think about the more vulnerable people in society. I know a lot of younger people arenโt so worried about getting Covid-19 but they need to think about who they are going to pass it on to, think about their parents, their grand-parents and take them into account, itโs only a haircut, itโs not the end of the worldโ.
Living in Clare for sixteen years, the Tallaght native is reminded of charity fundraisers that have seen people grow beards, dye their hair or get a wax on whatโs needed to prevent elderly people getting in contact with Covid-19.
โWe constantly hear about people doing charity events like growing beard for a month or a year looking for people to pay money. In order to do charity for the type of people that are vulnerable now of getting Covid-19 and possibly dying, there shouldnโt be any reason why people canโt look at it in that way. Now weโre all doing a charity event together and weโll grow our hair for however long it takes, weโll do that and save lives but we donโt need to raise money we just need to do that, that is what is saving lives, we donโt need the money just the responsibility and the isolationโ.
Since Colm’s decision to close, the majority of barbers, hairdressers and salons have followed suit. One Ennis based equivalent, Panache has remained open despite heightened concerns regarding social distancing.