Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NEW ORLEANS bars reopen, await tourists.

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NEW ORLEANS — Bar owners in New Orleans prepared for a soft opening, and an uncertain one, as they let customers in Saturday for the first time in months. Capacity was limited to 25% and live music remains prohibited.

Pam Fortner, owner of six French Quarter venues, is opening only two of them, both on Bourbon Street, where the customary blockslong frat party atmosphere ended in an abrupt shutdown in mid-March.

Now, she’s not sure what to expect. She sat at a sidewalk table at Royal and St. Ann streets Thursday, eating a Caesar salad and deriving hope from the occasional outof-state license plate she saw amid sparse traffic.

“I think Saturday will be busy,” she said.

Cherie Boos, manager of Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop, in an authentica­lly rustic, creaky-floored 18th-century Creole cottage, said she’s hoping locals will help keep the bar afloat as Bourbon Street revives. But, she added, “We’re hoping that, you know, we can start generating some tourists in the city, too, now that the bars are going to be open.”

Bourbon Street, which had the ambiance of an empty movie set in April, has experience­d a slow reawakenin­g in

recent weeks. Dine-in restaurant­s have been allowed to reopen at 25% capacity, as have bars with food permits. Still, traffic has been slow and plywood covered numerous tavern windows until Mayor LaToya Cantrell announced the latest easing of restrictio­ns in a city that, in the spring, had become an internatio­nal hot spot for covid-19.

Even as they announced the reopenings Tuesday, city officials admitted they were concerned about a possible recurrence.

“Oh, I’m worried. I am worried,” Cantrell said at a news conference. She said city code enforcemen­t officials will watch to make sure

social distancing, masking requiremen­ts and building capacity limits are enforced.

Customers will have to be mindful, too, said Dr. Jennifer Avegno, the city’s health director. “If you’re there with your household group and you’re having drinks at a table at a bar, we really need you not to go off and mingle with the other tables,” she said Tuesday.

There will be no musicians on stage at Fortner’s Tropical Isle bars on Bourbon Street. That prevents people from congregati­ng near the stage and eliminates the possibilit­y that a singer belting out a song could be unknowingl­y spreading the virus, a fear that has kept the city from relaxing its ban on live music, including choirs in churches.

Some New Orleans bar owners are critical of the restrictio­ns. “Why are they picking on the musicians?” said Fortner.

And some bars, like the Maple Leaf, a venerable latenight haunt in the Carrollton neighborho­od, decided not to open.

“While our City leaders have decided to allow bars to reopen … we will not be allowed to have Live Music, and what is the Leaf without our musicians?” read a post on the Maple Leaf’s Facebook page.

One of the Quarter’s bestknown tourist spots, Pat O’Brien’s, also didn’t plan an immediate reopening. Manager Shelley Waguespack has numerous concerns as she decides when and how to reopen.

She’s hoping the state Legislatur­e will address one concern — liability. She said she worries about getting sued if someone who visits the bar later comes down with covid-19.

She’s also unhappy about the limits on live music.

“We wanted to put a piano player on the patio,” Waguespack said. “We thought that would have been lovely.”

 ?? (AP/Kevin McGill) ?? A worker carries equipment Friday into Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop, a bar on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. More photos at arkansason­line.com/614orleans/.
(AP/Kevin McGill) A worker carries equipment Friday into Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop, a bar on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. More photos at arkansason­line.com/614orleans/.

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