China Daily

NY Chinese restaurant closes, blaming city

- William Hennelly Contact the writer at williamhen­nelly @chinadaily­usa.com

The fun has stopped at a longtime Chinese restaurant in Manhattan that has fed its share of celebritie­s over the past 25 years.

China Fun on Second Avenue on New York’s Upper East Side, once frequented by Jerry Seinfeld, Martin Scorsese and Rudy Giuliani, among other notables, posted a notice on its front door blaming city and state regulation­s for its Jan 3 shuttering.

The all-caps note claimed that “the state and municipal government­s, with their punishing rules and regulation­s, seem to believe that we should be their cash machine to pay for all that ails us in society, even though we suffer just like everyone else from an economy in flux”.

“It has been a great run serving you our delicious soup dumplings, scallion pancakes and General T’sao Chicken, but the climate for small businesses like ours in New York (has) become such that it’s difficult to justify taking risks and running — never mind starting — a legitimate ‘mom-and-pop’ business.”

A spokesman for the NYC Department of Small Business Services told dnainfo.com: “While the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the closure of this specific restaurant are unclear, the department offers free, on-site regulatory consultati­ons to help small businesses proactivel­y comply with applicable laws.”

On Monday, brown paper covered the windows at the 64th Street restaurant. About one in three passersby stopped to read the closing declaratio­n.

Dorothea Wu opened China Fun in 1991 with her husband, Felix.

A recent review in Time Out New York called the restaurant “an Upper East Side institutio­n” and “a jack-of-all-trades neighborho­od eatery with an impossibly long menu and a dizzying number of options”.

“It’s no surprise that its strength is in Cantoneses­tyle cuisine given that owner Wu — grandniece of General Chiang Kai-shek and a Taiwanese immigrant herself — has a personal affinity for soup dumplings,” the review said.

The owners’ son, Albert, told the New York Daily News that paperwork and regulation had an accumulati­ve effect on the business.

“When we started out in 1991, the lunch special was $4 a plate,” he said. “Now it’s $10, $12. The cost of doing business is just too onerous. In a one-restaurant operation like ours, you’re spending more time on paperwork than you are trying to run your business.”

Wu also mentioned increases in the city’s minimum wage, health insurance and general insurance. “And I haven’t even gone into the dealth department rules and regulation­s,” he added.

For 2017, the minimum wage for restaurant workers at city establishm­ents with 11 workers or more is $11 an hour. However, employers can reduce that rate to $9.15 an hour when tips are averaged into pay.

A perusing of Yelp! reviews showed a mixed bag about China Fun:

“Over priced Chinese and mediocre at best ,” wrote one patron .“We ordered pickup— my boyfriend got sesame chicken $16.99 and I got streamed chicken with broccoli and water chestnuts $19.99. My portion was small comparedto his .… Gave one star for the quick preparatio­n but feel we can order better-tasting Chinese food for 25 percent less. Would not recommend .”

“I’m heartbroke­n to hear they are closing,” wrote another. “They’ve always had a good crowd, and it’s been one of my go-to’s for years.”

 ??  ?? Online Scan the code to hear an audio version.
Online Scan the code to hear an audio version.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong