Albuquerque Journal

Restaurant­s join ‘Let Us Serve’ protests

Some New Mexico eateries refuse to comply with indoor dining ban

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New Mexico restaurant workers and owners took to their parking lots and social media pages Monday in a “virtual protest” against a new public health order that once again bars indoor dining at restaurant­s and breweries.

The New Mexico Restaurant Associatio­n, which organized the protest, asked restaurant­s to gather staff to stand outside their establishm­ents with signs asking Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham to reverse course and allow indoor dining in restaurant­s. The organizati­on has indicated it will request a court order Tuesday morning allowing restaurant­s to continue offering dine-in services.

The ban on indoor dining took effect Monday. The governor announced the measure Thursday in response to a rising number of COVID-19 cases in the state. Patio dining is still allowed in limited numbers.

Photos on the associatio­n’s social media sites show participan­ts from a wide range of restaurant­s participat­ing in the

event across the state, including in Albuquerqu­e, Las Cruces, Gallup and Clovis.

Several restaurant owners said that they felt the new restrictio­ns were unwarrante­d.

“I feel like this order singles out small local businesses and allows chains to continue to exist,” Broken Trail Distillery and Brewery owner Matt Simonds said. “This isn’t some faceless company. This is me and my family, the family of my bartenders, the family of my brewers.”

Simonds said the uncertaint­y surroundin­g closures has added to the stress he and his employees face.

“They’re upset that there’s no clue from one day to the next,” he said.

Aside from the uncertaint­y of the closures, Simonds said he and other restaurant owners feel that the governor has not provided sufficient data to justify the ban on indoor dining.

Carol Wight, CEO of the restaurant associatio­n, echoed this sentiment and said there is no evidence that restaurant­s are causing the spread of coronaviru­s.

The Governor’s Office said the newly reinstated ban on indoor dining at restaurant­s is about safety, not punishment.

“We’re not placing ‘blame’ on all restaurant­s,” office spokeswoma­n Nora Meyers Sackett wrote in an email. “The blame falls on the virus itself and any New Mexicans who are not taking every precaution to limit the spread of it, because as the virus continues to spread, prolonged exposure without face coverings — like in high-contact indoor settings, i.e. restaurant­s — becomes an even more significan­t risk factor.”

The Governor’s Office didn’t cite any specific studies in response to questions raised by restaurate­urs. On Thursday, the World Health Organizati­on said there have been reports of outbreaks linked to indoor crowded spaces from airborne transmissi­on in restaurant­s and gyms.

“This virus does not discrimina­te,” Lujan Grisham said in a Monday statement. “But we know prolonged exposure without face-coverings — as is the case in high-contact indoor settings — is a significan­t risk factor.”

‘Hundreds’ of eateries

On Monday, the NMRA posted dozens of photos of restaurant­s participat­ing in the protest.

NMRA spokeswoma­n Toni Balzano said she’s heard of “hundreds” of restaurant­s participat­ing across the state.

“They just want to have their voices heard,” she said. “They’re busy running their businesses and trying to take care of their employees.”

Staffers at Albuquerqu­e’s 66 Diner on Central were among the protesters. Owner Tom Willis said the latest change to the public health order is “disappoint­ing at best.”

Willis said that it was difficult to weather the initial closure and that moving to takeout brought in only a fraction of usual business.

The 66 Diner will be abiding by the latest order, and Willis said he has hopes that takeout will be more lucrative this time around.

In Uptown, Fork and Fig owner Josh Kennon was supporting the protest despite being closed Monday.

“I believe that the whole closing down the restaurant­s to in-person dining is basically targeting restaurant­s, and I feel that that’s unfair,” he said.

Kennon said that the restaurant lost nearly all its business during the first closure and that takeout does little to recoup the sales that come from in-person dining.

“It was awful — we were down 97% in sales,” he said.

Several restaurant­s in the state took the protest a step further and openly flouted the public health order by welcoming customers into dining rooms Monday.

Michael Dennis, licensed owner of the Santa Fe and Farmington locations of Weck’s, was one of the business owners who welcomed diners Monday morning.

The Facebook page associated with the Albuquerqu­e Weck’s posted what appeared to be a message from Dennis encouragin­g other restaurant owners to “band together and stay open” Monday but the Albuquerqu­e location sought to distance itself from the move, noting that Dennis’ decisions are “independen­t from all other Weck’s locations.”

“ALL Weck’s ABQ, Rio Rancho, Los Lunas and Las Cruces locations are NOT affiliated with the decisions he is making for his restaurant­s,” the post said.

Dennis did not return calls for an interview Monday.

The Trinity Hotel in Carlsbad said it would remain open and encouraged customers to come in as a “protest.”

“Participan­ts in the protest will be buying food and sitting in the restaurant as act of protest against a health order, and to exercise their right to free speech,” the restaurant said in a Facebook post Sunday.

In Hobbs, the Pizza Inn also chose to open to dine-in customers, and said customers would be “protesting” the current health order.

Balzano said she had heard of around a dozen restaurant­s in the southern half of the state that planned to stay open Monday.

 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Staff members from 66 Diner on Central join the “Let Us Serve” protest Monday asking Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham to reverse a newly reinstated ban on in-person dining at New Mexico restaurant­s and breweries.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Staff members from 66 Diner on Central join the “Let Us Serve” protest Monday asking Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham to reverse a newly reinstated ban on in-person dining at New Mexico restaurant­s and breweries.
 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Customers head toward a Weck’s in Santa Fe on Monday. The restaurant remained open to in-person dining despite a recent public health order.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Customers head toward a Weck’s in Santa Fe on Monday. The restaurant remained open to in-person dining despite a recent public health order.
 ?? ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL ?? Chirstophe­r Elliott, a busser at La Placita Cantina in Old Town, sanitizes a table on the porch, which has traditiona­lly been used by Native American jewelry sellers.
ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL Chirstophe­r Elliott, a busser at La Placita Cantina in Old Town, sanitizes a table on the porch, which has traditiona­lly been used by Native American jewelry sellers.

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