It has been an exhausting few weeks despite the recent public holidays. Yes, the long weekends were most welcome and provided families time to get together and just recharge in what has been a whirlwind year. However, it has definitely not been without its disruptions either, with tighter deadlines as a result of shorter weeks, leaving one feeling more tired than in a normal work week. This has been the pattern for the last number of weeks and has definitely impacted production across various sectors.

In short, the last time we had a proper five-day working week was in March. But hopefully, from next week we will all be back to full production.

But what astounds one is that just as learners are getting back into the swing of things behind their school desks, following two years of disruption due to Covid-19, they find their schedules once again disrupted.

For example, the Department of Education gave them school holidays, and when they were just back in the classroom the weeks that followed were severely disrupted by public holidays.

Surely this is short-sighted planning by the powers that be? One would think that instead of having the school holidays they would logically have opted to combine the Easter weekend with the prescribed school holidays.

Notwithstanding the businesses that lose a large part of their turnover due to unproductivity . . . Yes, everyone needs a break, but at what cost?

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  • Weslander E-Edition – 5 March 2026
    Weslander E-Edition – 5 March 2026

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