Cameron Harrison Butchery owner Rob Cameron in his Ngaio shop in Wellington. Photo / Mark Mitchelll
Butchers are losing sleep over limited meat supply and claim supermarkets are being prioritised in lockdown over their small businesses.
In alert level 4 butchers are not allowed to open their shops to the public, but are allowed to do online contactless deliveries.
Meanwhile supermarkets are "scrambling" to keep their shelves stocked and their doors open as they face an 80 per cent increase in business since the start of the national Covid-19 lockdown.
This while many staff have been forced into isolation due to the pandemic.
And the head of one of New Zealand's major supermarket companies supports butchers - and other food supply businesses - opening during level 4 restrictions if there is a firm safety strategy in place.
He got the impression private individual butchers were not a priority for suppliers.
"We're probably a pain in their bum because a few little butchers falling over and they get burnt for a few thousand dollars I suppose.
"It's just a frustrating time in the year, but it's nobody's fault."
Island Bay Butchery owner Krissy Mackintosh told Newstalk ZB's Nick Mills this morning her business could not meet demand under alert level 4 restrictions.
"We're doing deliveries and it's not easy- we can't reach the amount of people we could get in a day, there's no way.
"Last year we went around at night time knocking on doors - that was a bit ridiculous. You just can't meet the need."
Mackintosh said butchers' shops should be allowed to open under alert level 4.
She said in a supermarket many customers touched the packets of meat compared to a butcher's shop where only the butcher handled the meat.
"We've got all the things in place- the sanitising, the social distancing, staff wear masks and gloves, the eftpos machine. What the heck is the difference?"