Chattanooga Times Free Press

On a bleak Valentine’s Day, Americans try to find hope

- BY CLAIRE GALOFARO AND DON BABWIN

The notecards poking from bouquets rushing out of a Chicago florist all carry similar messages: “looking forward to celebratin­g in person.”

“The notes aren’t sad,” said Kate Prince, a co-owner of Flora Chicago on the city’s North Side. “They’re hopeful.”

On this Valentine’s Day, Americans are searching for ways to celebrate love amid so much heartache and isolation as the coronaviru­s pandemic stretches past its year anniversar­y. Some are clinging to hope, seen in the most vulnerable and frontline workers getting vaccinated, in loosening restrictio­ns on restaurant­s in the hardest hit places, in case numbers starting to wane. But the death toll is still climbing toward a half-million dead in the United States and many remain shuttered in their homes.

Prince said florists are scrambling to keep up with the onslaught of orders from people trying to send their love from a safe distance.

“We are crushed,” she said. Phones are ringing off the hook at restaurant­s in cities that have loosened restrictio­ns on indoor dining just in time for Valentine’s Day, one of the busiest days of the year for many eateries that have been devastated by shutdowns designed to slow the spread of the virus.

In Chicago, the mayor loosened up indoor dining restrictio­ns this week. After limiting restaurant­s to 25% capacity and 25 people per room, restaurant­s now must remain at 25% but they can serve as many as 50 per room.

The Darling restaurant is fully booked for this weekend and has been for weeks.

Sophie Huterstein, the restaurant’s owner, said COVID-19 has allowed the 2-year-old eatery to accomplish the impossible: make people happy to agree to a 4 p.m. reservatio­n.

“People are being very flexible,” she said.

They are also this Valentine’s Day willing to do something else over a weekend where the high temperatur­e will reach the teens and the low will plummet well below zero.

“We have 14 greenhouse­s and people are coming out in full ski gear,” she said.

In New York City, the America Bar restaurant in the West Village is also fully booked for Valentine’s Day with a long waiting list and high demand for the newly allowed 25% capacity for indoor tables, said David Rabin, a partner in the eatery. More seats, along with the governor’s decision to allow closing times to move from 10 p.m. to 11 p.m., has allowed him to give more shifts to his workers.

“For us, it’s a welcome gift,” he said. “It’s been great.”

T Bar NYC Steak and Lounge on the Upper East Side is also fully booked. Owner Tony Fortuna says some of his customers won’t dine indoors and he understand­s, but for those clamoring to get back to restaurant dining, 25% is a good start. It gives people a glimmer of normalcy at a heartbreak­ing time.

 ?? AP PHOTO/CHARLES REX ARBOGAST ?? A shopper at a Chicago area grocery store looks over Valentine’s Day flowers Saturday.
AP PHOTO/CHARLES REX ARBOGAST A shopper at a Chicago area grocery store looks over Valentine’s Day flowers Saturday.

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