| Top Ten Bingo closes another bingo club |
| Friday, 05 March 2010 16:49 |
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Top Ten Bingo has closed another of its bingo clubs. The small club in Wednesbury is to close its doors after 30 years with around 20 staff facing redundancy. The club was part of the Walkers brand, known as Walkers Bingo Club. The company merged with Top Ten Bingo several years ago during the era that Top Ten pursued an aggressive strategy in buying up numerous smaller bingo operators. As we reported previously, as a result of this strategy Top Ten has been forced to close more than 25% of its clubs over recent years and plans to continue this reduction are still being implemented. The Walkers Bingo Club in Wednesbury boasted around 4,000 admissions per week in its heyday but levels have reduced to around 800 per week in the current climate. With more than 1,500 members registered, the closure of the Walkers Bingo club on Walsall Street on Wednesday has left staff emotional, and the community devastated. With it’s oldest regular at 96 years old, the club has built a loyal fanbase since its establishment in 1976, with general manager Barbara Toy commenting that Walkers was a bingo club rooted in tradition. Mrs Toy, aged 60, said “We are one of the last traditional bingo clubs and have regular customers in their 80s and 90s. We are more like a social club and everyone knows each others’ names. Where are the customers going to go now? “They have no where to go and this is another blow for this end of the town.” General manager, Mrs Toy commented: “I am devastated, we all are. I can’t put into words how upset I am, my heart is breaking. “I have been here for 28 years and my assistant manager, June Perry, has been here for 23. What’s next for us now?” Mrs Toy confirmed that all the Walkers Bingo Club staff had lost their jobs as a result of the clousre. “The recession, the smoking ban, internet bingo and changes to the gambling laws have all hit us hard,” she said. “And we can’t compete with the likes of Mecca and Gala, which are both in the town. The youngsters these days want cheap bingo and not necessarily the traditional environment we have here.” The local council remarked that the building would hopefully find a new lease of life beyond bingo. Councillor Bill Archer, Conservative member for Wednesbury North at Sandwell Council, said: “This is a beautiful historic building and I have many happy memories from the time that it was a cinema. “It is a sad day for Wednesbury, to see another small operation like this closing its doors, but can see how it has happened with so much competition in the area. “What we need to focus on now is protecting this historic building and getting it back into use.”
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