Street food vendors are back after Covid safety training, now hoping for business to return
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Street food vendors are back after Covid safety training, now hoping for business to return

With Covid numbers rising in India, many people will continue to play it safe, which means a grim future for the street food business.

   

Representational image of street food | Wikimedia Commons

Mohan Singh Varma is 42 years old. He sells biryani by day and momos by night near Delhi’s Preet Vihar Metro Station, but he now hands out his plates through partitions in the plastic sheets that ensconce his cart.

He has also kept a separate table nearby, from where customers can collect food, to ensure maximum social distancing. But he only gets about 25 customers in a day now anyway, as opposed to 70-80 before coronavirus struck and the lockdown was announced.

Despite several restrictions being eased and the process of ‘unlocking‘ well under way, street food vendors across India continue to struggle. This is not surprising, given that Covid numbers in India are on the rise, and many people are still staying home as much as they can, venturing out only for essential activities. Add to that the fact that street food such as chaat, gol gappa and aloo tikki are all contact-based food.

Yet, Varma and many other vendors are taking pains to ensure the food they serve is safe and sanitary. Despite the fact that they stand out in the heat all day and it is the peak of summer, they are conscientious about wearing their masks and gloves and have even taken on additional costs to ensure food hygiene.

“I have introduced new disposable packaging for the food. I now serve in silver foil containers that cost about Rs 5-6 a piece. Before I used to serve on disposable plates that cost Rs 2,” Varma tells ThePrint.

Street food vendor Mohan Singh Varma sells biryani and momos from a stand near Delhi’s Preet Vihar Metro Station. The stand is now covered in a plastic sheet and Varma makes sure to wear a mask and gloves | Photo: Mohan Singh Varma

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Vendors trained in hygiene & food safety on Zoom

Varma is one of 1,500 street food vendors across India who have completed digital training on Covid-19 food safety guidelines, facilitated by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) in partnership with the National Association of Street Vendors of India (NASVI). Many like Varma have received a food safety training and certification (FOSTAC) that they display on their carts or stalls.

Screenshot of the FOSTAC certificate of participation given by NASVI to street food vendors | Photo: Sangeeta Singh of NASVI

According to Sangeeta Singh, head of the street food programme at NASVI, the certification is the first step. “The training, which includes two- to three-hour Zoom sessions spread over two days, focuses on food hygiene and Covid precautions. It has already given vendors confidence and they are getting a good response,” she explains to ThePrint. However, there were limitations such as many vendors not having access to smartphones, and the FSSAI only being able to train 100 vendors per day.

Singh says the training kept street food vendors occupied during lockdown since they were excluded from Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri’s advisory on 3 April that made allowances only for vendors selling fruits, vegetables and groceries. NASVI had appealed to Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal in late March to allow street food vendors to help the government provide cooked meals to the public, which would in turn help them earn an income, but it did not receive a response, says Singh.


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Many are abandoning the business

According to Singh’s estimates, there are more than 1 crore street vendors across the country, of whom 30 per cent sell food. Though 1,500 are now FOSTAC-certified, the vast majority seems to have abandoned businesses or are on the brink of doing so.

After selling daulat ki chaat and gol gappas in Delhi’s Parathewali Gali in Chandni Chowk for 30 years, 45-year-old Khempal Singh returned to his hometown of Moradabad in Uttar Pradesh on his motorcycle shortly after the lockdown began.

“Anyway, the season for chaat starts after 15 October and my shop has been closed since Holi. I could have stayed and sold gol gappas but that didn’t look promising,” he tells ThePrint. Singh is unsure whether he will return to Delhi and resume his business.

The situation is so dire that even one of the most famous chaat vendors, Dalchand Kashyap, who featured in an episode of Netflix show Street Food: Asia, is biting his nails. Despite receiving his FOSTAC certificate, which he has displayed on his chaat stall in Mayur Vihar, Kashyap says he makes about Rs 3,000 a day, a huge drop from his earlier earnings of Rs 10,000. “It’s the fear. People don’t want to come out no matter if we wear masks, gloves, use sanitiser or have a certificate up in front of our stall. My business got a leg-up after the Netflix show, but that doesn’t make much of a difference now.”

But there are people who would love to see their favourite street food stalls back in action and thriving. Mumbai resident Vinay Chandnani tells ThePrint he believes the fear and paranoia surrounding street food may stem from “anti-poor sentiments”. He says, “I personally miss going to Ram & Shyam Chaatwala in Santacruz. My mom and I love going there to chat while eating pani puri after pani puri. I also miss going to the omelette and pav wala near Santacruz station. He was always open on Thursday nights but I don’t see him around anymore.”

College student Tarini Jain has actually been out to visit her favourite vendor after the lockdown was eased. She says, “Having moved from Noida to Gurgaon, the one person I missed the most was the kachori and aloo-ki sabzi wala in Sector 19 that I’ve been going to since I was a child. I visited him with my mom last week and he immediately remembered us. We’re loyal customers.”


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The future of street food

But it wont’s be easy. Rajkumar Jain, who owns Bengali Sweet Center in Delhi’s South Extension, which used to throng with customers, says the popular shop now receives just about 15 customers in a day. “I don’t see the business bouncing back for at least one year,” he says, ruefully.

The shop, first established in 1963, is on Jain’s family property, so rent, fortunately, is not an issue. But the business has suffered not just from loss of demand, but loss of labour as well, after 50 of its 70 employees returned to their native towns over the last three months. Jain says he had 40 shops in the South Extension market itself, of which he had to close 15 as they were unable to make “a single sale in an entire day”.

While NASVI is in talks with Swiggy, Zomato and other food delivery platforms to initiate home delivery for street food vendors, Jain is skeptical. “Why will people want to spend the extra buck on home delivery? And the whole point of street food is to be on the street when it is served to you,” he says, questioning whether street food will be redefined in a post-Covid world.


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