The Philippine Star

Preparing to dine in

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Guidelines were released over the weekend by the Department of Trade and Industry for dine-in service in restaurant­s and fast-food chains. The DTI guidelines, issued on the eve of Metro Manila’s transition to general community quarantine, were approved yesterday by the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infection Diseases or IATF.

The only question is when dine-in services can resume. The IATF has approved the reopening of barbershop­s and salons by June 7, although facials, manicure-pedicure and massage services remain prohibited. Dining in involves less direct physical contact than hairdressi­ng, but food-handling hygiene is a concern.

Industry players estimate that up to 490,000 Filipinos are employed in 16,300 dine-in restaurant­s nationwide. The players say they expect half of the establishm­ents to permanentl­y close shop as a result of pandemic restrictio­ns, particular­ly physical distancing requiremen­ts that on average can cut the number of patrons by half at any given time. Such restrictio­ns are seen to persist for months in the absence of a vaccine or cure for COVID-19.

Even fast-food chains that have survived the pandemic through takeouts, drive-through operations and deliveries are feeling the strain of reduced earnings due to the prohibitio­n on dining in.

Now, with dine-in establishm­ents in certain countries serving as models, the DTI has recommende­d the guidelines for reopening. These include the use of suitable dividers to promote physical distancing as well as the use of single-use menus per table or other ways of taking food orders without promoting the transmissi­on of pathogens. Buffets and self-serve areas will remain banned.

Health protocols that have become part of the pandemic normal will be required: temperatur­e checks for all, well-equipped sanitation stations for hand washing and disinfecti­on, and possibly footbaths at entrances.

Reviving the dining industry could not only save jobs but also provide employment to the tens of thousands of overseas Filipino workers who have been forced to return home after losing their jobs amid the pandemic. For years, the food service industry has been one of the biggest employers of OFWs. In hotels, on cruise ships and commercial liners around the planet, there are Filipinos working in kitchens. If they lose their jobs and return home, they can be absorbed by the local food service industry. But first the industry must reopen and thrive again.

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