Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Virus-rule flouting draws complaints

People note eateries’ safety missteps

- KAT STROMQUIST

Before the shutdown of Little Rock’s Brewski’s Pub and Grub over allegation­s that it had flouted coronaviru­s guidelines, the Arkansas Department of Health issued formal warnings to three other restaurant­s over noncomplia­nce with pandemic safety rules, records show.

Members of the public — and sometimes restaurant­s’ own employees — also have made more than 250 complaints to the agency since May about similar violations at restaurant­s, bars and other establishm­ents, saying workers and customers didn’t wear masks, keep 6 feet apart or follow other directives. A Paragould pizza chain’s manager didn’t ask a feverish employee to go home, a caller said.

South Park Restaurant in Clarksvill­e, Flying Burger in El Dorado and Buffet City in Benton received warning notices for violations that inspectors noted, Health Department records show. Sites that received letters

could have their licenses suspended or be fined for repeat violations.

Warnings, complaint data and reports obtained under the state’s public-records law suggest uneven compliance with state covid-19 health directives for restaurant­s and bars, the most frequent subject of complaints, according to the newspaper’s review. The records also reveal the challenge of enforcing the rules.

While virus cases climbed, complaints poured in from cities across the state, from Alma to West Memphis, according to the records. The Health Department received at least nine complaints about the Clarksvill­e restaurant, officials said.

“The ongoing disregard for the protection of public health is noted by this letter,” the June 5 warning notice, sent to South Park owner Dean Hammons, reads. “Please note that these complaints came from the local community.”

Hammons did not return a message left at a cellphone number listed for him. An employee who answered the phone at the restaurant late last week first denied the site received such a letter, then said the manager on duty “doesn’t want to talk to anybody right now.”

Owners of Flying Burger and Buffet City also didn’t return messages requesting comment.

During the pandemic, the Health Department has issued multiple revisions of rules governing dine-in and bar operations for the state’s phased reopening. New rules that went into effect June 15 limit occupancy to 66%, ban self-service areas and require screenings and masks for staff members, among other measures.

Those restrictio­ns returned to the spotlight after the forced closure of Brewski’s Pub and Grub on July 4 after health officials traced an infection cluster to the business. A Board of Health order said the business ran over its capacity and that a manager had said of customers: “We can’t make them wear masks. We wish they would, but we can’t do much.”

The pub’s owner last week told the newspaper that he was cooperatin­g with health officials, and the health agency is working to develop a compliance plan.

Data reviewed by the newspaper did not always include informatio­n about whether complaints were investigat­ed in person or substantia­ted, so some establishm­ents are not named here. Records are incomplete and came from several sources, including hotline calls, emails and inspection­s across a few Health Department divisions.

Sherri Woodus, retail food services manager at the Health Department, said complaints to the agency have waxed and waned as more people venture out of their homes and visit businesses. She said the agency takes an education-based approach to enforcemen­t and stressed that regulators are “not the villains — we’re not trying to shut you down.”

“The lion’s share of the establishm­ent owners and operators are trying to [follow] the directive as best as they can interpret it,” she said.

Others may have a resource issue — “maybe they don’t have the ability to get masks,” she said. “And then there’s that small fraction that just doesn’t want to do it.”

The Arkansas Hospitalit­y Associatio­n’s chief executive officer, Montine McNulty, said there may have been early confusion about the recommenda­tions. Restaurate­urs are “doing everything they can to comply. … I think they really understand that it’s for everybody’s best interest, including their own staff,” she said.

‘NOT THE POLICE’

Before the Brewski’s closure, records show, the Health Department was inundated with telephone and email complaints, including about the three restaurant­s that received warning letters.

The El Dorado restaurant was not requiring masks, screening employees or limiting visitors, and it offered a condiment bar and access to self-serve items, an inspector found.

The Benton restaurant had a self-serve buffet, didn’t require masks, denied entry to an inspector and “refused to sign the inspection report,” officials said in a letter.

Stakes for compliance remain high as covid-19 cases grow in Arkansas and across the South. Amid the spike in infections, Miami closed down indoor dining last week, and many Houston restaurant­s closed voluntaril­y, reports said.

Researcher­s continue to evaluate the risk that visits to such establishm­ents pose. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention categorize­s on-site dining with indoor and outdoor seating as an “even more risk” category on its website, and it says that restaurant­s and bars should take action to reduce the spread of illness among customers and employees.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson has stressed the need for cooperatio­n from both residents and businesses, urging Arkansans to act responsibl­y. But in some instances, businesses or patrons dismiss protective rules, records show, including at a chain diner in Springdale, where an employee called in an anonymous complaint.

“Managers told her that they are not the police and are not requiring their customers to wear masks if they did not want to,” a database entry says.

At a family restaurant with locations in Batesville and Maumelle, a complainan­t said workers weren’t wearing masks and that an employee “told him that it gives her anxiety to wear them.” Employees also weren’t wearing masks at a chicken wing restaurant in Bentonvill­e, a complainan­t alleged on June 14, even as infections accelerate­d in the Northwest region.

A few entries in one database also hint at frustratio­n among agency staff members, as in a short write-up regarding a complaint about a Batesville food mart.

After following up, a staff member got a call from an owner, “who proceeded to tell me that he doesn’t believe that the virus is real, and that he doesn’t believe in the news. He proceeded to argue with me for 20 minutes on the definition of what constitute­s a food establishm­ent,” the staff member wrote.

Hutchinson announced on June 26 that Alcoholic Beverage Control agents, who regularly partner with the Health Department, will help monitor for adherence to health directives. That agency has conducted 107 unannounce­d inspection­s and found seven instances of sites not following guidelines, a spokesman said last week.

In a statement, Hutchinson said businesses have the “greatest motivation” for compliance, which is “to keep their customers and staff healthy and to protect their business model and investment.”

He said education and enforcemen­t have helped bring more places in line, and he attributed problems some outlined in the complaints to customers’ failure to stick to regulation­s, and to “the difficulty of the business owner trying to enforce the rules.”

Woodus, the Health Department manager, said she thought local ordinances encouragin­g or requiring mask usage will help with more widespread adoption of the rules. In her view, a “failure to cooperate” has slowed reopening.

“I really want the public to hurry up, and let’s all do this together so we can stop this,” she said.

“There’s a certain percentage of the population that are going to be against wearing a mask, no matter what,” said McNulty, the Hospitalit­y Associatio­n director. “The fact is, they don’t need to be in a public restaurant.”

Complaints about violating Arkansas health guidelines aren’t limited to restaurant­s and bars, though those were the most frequent subjects of reports.

Inspectors verified at least 28 complaints against hair and nail salons, records show. They included a Sherwood beauty school and salon, which a complainan­t said was skirting a rule against walk-in visits by allowing people to walk in, make an “appointmen­t,” step outside briefly and then go back in.

The salon received a warning letter for not following directives on May 27.

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