Montreal Gazette

Canadian entreprene­urs in Florida lament loss of snowbirds this year

- JAMES MCCARTEN

Each spring, near a south Florida seaside strip known as the Broadwalk, the grateful retailers and restaurate­urs of Hollywood Beach gather for a two-day celebratio­n of all things Canada.

“Canadafest” has played out for nearly 40 years in the heart of a uniquely Canadian diaspora south of Fort Lauderdale, a way of saying thank you to the roughly 1.2 million people from north of the border who visit the state annually.

The 2021 Canadafest was to be the biggest ever, said Denise Dumont, the editor-in-chief of Le Soleil de la Floride, the French-language community newspaper that helps organize the event.

COVID-19, of course, had other plans.

“The 2021 edition has been cancelled, for obvious reasons,” Dumont said. “We hope that later on, we're going to be able to continue the tradition.”

It's just one illustrati­on of the looming “dark winter” the pandemic has wrought in the United States, where the number of single-day deaths and new infections have blown past earlier peaks establishe­d in the spring.

And in a part of the country that has come to embrace Canada's seasonal visitors as family, the health risks and cross-border travel restrictio­ns are sure to amplify the pain.

“It's going to be a tough, tough season,” said Dan Serafini, a veteran Hollywood restaurate­ur who has been a fixture in the area since migrating from Sudbury, Ont., with his wife Lise-anne in 1984.

The Serafinis, whose first restaurant became the original East Side Mario's, have operated GG'S Waterfront Bar and Grill in Hollywood for a decade. Their latest venture, a casual eatery they've rechristen­ed Tiki Tiki, is run by their son, Alex.

Receipts for November were about 30 per cent lower than previous years, Serafini said — a figure that reflects both a decline in Canadian traffic and a modest increase in the number of visiting Americans.

In a typical year, roughly 500,000 Canadians — many of them from Quebec — spend the winter in Florida, said Evan Rachkovsky, a spokesman for the Canadian Snowbird Associatio­n. Many gravitate to Hollywood, and have done since the 1920s, when labourers from Canada helped founder Joseph Young build the city from scratch.

Their ranks are expected to plunge 70 per cent this season, Rachkovsky said, to say nothing of the likely impact on short-term visits. Together, snowbirds and shortterme­rs typically spend more than US$6 billion in the state each year.

“I'll tell you, we love those Canadians,” Serafini said. “When they come, they spend, and they really help the local economy here. And they're entrenched in this community — they've been here for years and years, have settled here to some degree, and this is their home away from home.” Not this year. Florida has the third-highest total COVID-19 caseload of all 50 U.S. states — more than a million and nearly 20,000 deaths.

Visit Florida, the state's tourism marketing agency, said preliminar­y figures show a 98.8 per cent decline in Canadian visits during July, August and September compared with the same period a year ago.

Debra Case, who has owned and operated the Ocean Alley Restaurant and Beach Bar with husband, Terry, for the last 20 years, said business is down by half compared with 2019, despite a very strong first three months of the year.

In March, when the pandemic first hit, “everybody just left, and they haven't come back,” Case said.

“Even though we are allowed 50 per cent seating in our businesses, still today, we have nearly zero Canadian traffic. So you can imagine how that has impacted us.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Dan and Lise-anne Serafini say sales at their restaurant in Hollywood, Fla., are down about 30 per cent this year.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Dan and Lise-anne Serafini say sales at their restaurant in Hollywood, Fla., are down about 30 per cent this year.

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