Chattanooga Times Free Press

Opening Italy

Nation loosens coronaviru­s restrictio­ns again amid hopes for economic relaunch

- COLLEEN BARRY

MILAN — Lunch-time diners filled tables on Milan’s landmark Piazza Duomo even on a cloudy, windswept Monday, proof of the pent-up demand for eating out as Italy begins its second, and many hope last, opening of the covid-19 pandemic.

After six months of rotating onagain, off-again closings, restaurant­s, bars, museums and cinemas opened to the public in most of the country under a gradual opening plan seen as too cautious for some, too hasty for others.

The nation’s weary virologist­s and health care workers fear even the tentative plan laid out by Premier Mario Draghi’s government will invite a free-for-all, signs of which were seen over the weekend with parks and squares filling up in cities from Rome to Turin, Milan to Naples.

“It is illusory to think that you give a sign of opening, and you don’t see people around. Perfection doesn’t exist,” Milan Mayor Giuseppe Sala said Monday. “You also have to be a little tolerant and also a little careful.”

For restaurant owners struggling to survive, the return of outdoor dining is too little, too late, and the continued 10 p.m. curfew puts a damper on theater openings and sends a bad public relations message for internatio­nal tourism heading into the second pandemic summer.

Pizzeria Pino was granted rare permission by Milan officials to set up tables along the porticoes lining Piazza Duomo, some compensati­on for the lost indoor seating, as it served seated customers for the first time since February. The permit will last through the summer.

“We can only be happy,” waiter Antonio Carullo said. “Because we have many friends who have restaurant­s who don’t have a lot of space outside, or none at all, and they are still at home, out of work.”

The government’s vision is the renewed economic activity of the gradual opening — continuing with outdoor pools next month, gyms after that and larger events and fairs from mid-June — will be turbocharg­ed by $241 billion in EU and Italian recovery money that was outlined in parliament Monday.

“I am sure that honesty, intelligen­ce and the taste for the future will prevail over corruption, stupidity and vested interests,” Draghi told lawmakers in Rome.

Under pressure from right-wing partners, the government moved the openings a week earlier than initially planned, allowing free travel for the first time in months among 15 of Italy’s 21 regions and autonomous provinces under the lowest levels of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. The number of people who can visit friends and family at any one time was doubled from two to four. Restaurant­s and bars can seat people for open-air dining. Contact sports resumed outdoors.

In Rome’s Campo dei Fiori, restaurant owners set up tables outside and swept the cobbleston­es to welcome customers for sit-down service for the first time since mid-March. Venice remained empty of its usual throngs of tourists, but cafe owners wiped tables and chairs and placed them outside hoping for the local customers.

“It’s a bit of a rebirth,” said cafe owner Stefano Baldan in Campo Santa Margherita

“It is illusory to think that you give a sign of opening, and you don’t see people around. Perfection doesn’t exist. You also have to be a little tolerant and also a little careful.” — Giuseppe Sala, mayor of Milan, Italy

The openings come even as Italy’s intensive care wards remain above the 30% threshold for alarm. Italy’s vaccine campaign is also still well shy of its 500,000-shots-aday goal and is only now moving to protect people in the 70-79 age bracket. The World Health Organizati­on says people over 65 have accounted for the vast majority of covid-19 deaths in Europe.

That has caused concern among virologist­s who note the virus has been adept at transformi­ng itself with deadly variants, and in Italy the curve has only recently come under control, and could easily spike back up.

The Italian island of Sardinia — the only region free of restrictio­ns for a period this winter — has become a cautionary tale. It was plunged into the red zone in mid-April after the all-clear signal resulted in a surge of new infections.

Dr. Massimo Puoti, chief of infectious diseases at Milan’s Niguarda hospitals, said he believes Italy’s monitoring system would allow enough warning if the virus delivered another blow. Right now, he said the focus needs to remain on vaccinatio­ns, not so much to contain contagions, but to keep pressure off hospitals.

“That will allow us to return to our usual activity, because we have many patients who don’t have covid in need of treatment,” Puoti said, treatments that cannot be scheduled as long as the intensive care wards are under pressure. “Even if a cancer patient can wait for treatment, they are not waiting with serenity.”

Despite the difficulti­es, the decision to open was understand­able, Puoti said.

“After all it’s hard to restrain people, and also to cope with a serious economic crisis. There were important reasons behind this political decision,” he said.

In Milan, one movie house — Cinema Beltrade — organized an all-day film marathon, from 6 a.m. until 9:30 p.m. to celebrate with “a little craziness,” owner Monica Baldi said.

A socially distanced capacity crowd of 82 filled the cinema for the sunrise showing of Nanni Moretti’s 1993 film “Dear Diary,” a reprisal of the last film showing before shutdown in November that seemed only appropriat­e for the relaunch, Baldi said.

While Lombardy’s 500 live-performanc­e theaters are permitted to open, the reality is more complicate­d. Distancing rules allow a maximum 500 spectators, even in large theaters such as La Scala, which seats more than 2,000 people.

La Scala plans a symbolic opening concert next month conducted by Riccardo Muti. But a relaunch of the season with full calendar isn’t expected before September, when management hopes the orchestra and chorus can be fully vaccinated, and distancing rules more relaxed. In the meantime, it’s planning a series of open-air concerts around the city in the coming months.

“The important thing is that there will be occasions to have the audience return, and recreate the unique emotions of concerts,” general manager Dominique Meyer said.

 ?? (AP/Gregorio Borgia) ?? Coffee cups are left on a table outside a cafe in Rome.
(AP/Gregorio Borgia) Coffee cups are left on a table outside a cafe in Rome.
 ?? (AP/Gregorio Borgia) ?? Elementary school children attend an outdoor class with their teacher on the steps leading to Rome’s Capitol Hill.
(AP/Gregorio Borgia) Elementary school children attend an outdoor class with their teacher on the steps leading to Rome’s Capitol Hill.
 ?? (LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) ?? Passengers wearing face masks to curb the spread of covid-19 sit in a bus in Rome.
(LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) Passengers wearing face masks to curb the spread of covid-19 sit in a bus in Rome.
 ?? (AP/Gregorio Borgia) ?? People enjoy a hot drink at an outdoor seating area of a cafe in Rome. Italy began gradually opening Monday after six months of rotating virus lockdowns.
(AP/Gregorio Borgia) People enjoy a hot drink at an outdoor seating area of a cafe in Rome. Italy began gradually opening Monday after six months of rotating virus lockdowns.
 ?? (LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) ?? People enjoy a coffee at an outdoor cafe in Rome.
(LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) People enjoy a coffee at an outdoor cafe in Rome.
 ?? (AP/Antonio Calanni) ?? Commuters wearing face masks to curb the spread of covid-19 walk after getting off a regional train at the Cadorna railway station in Milan, Italy.
(AP/Antonio Calanni) Commuters wearing face masks to curb the spread of covid-19 walk after getting off a regional train at the Cadorna railway station in Milan, Italy.
 ?? (LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) ?? People wear face masks and are distantly seated as they wait to watch a movie at the Quattro Fontane cinema in Rome.
(LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) People wear face masks and are distantly seated as they wait to watch a movie at the Quattro Fontane cinema in Rome.
 ?? (LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) ?? High school students enter their school after months of limited classroom presence in Rome.
(LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) High school students enter their school after months of limited classroom presence in Rome.
 ?? (AP/Antonio Calanni) ?? People wear face masks and are distantly seated as they watch a movie inside a cinema hall of the Beltrade cinema in Milan, Italy. Italy began gradually opening Monday after six months of rotating virus lockdowns.
(AP/Antonio Calanni) People wear face masks and are distantly seated as they watch a movie inside a cinema hall of the Beltrade cinema in Milan, Italy. Italy began gradually opening Monday after six months of rotating virus lockdowns.
 ?? (LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) ?? Chairs and tables are prepared outside a restaurant in Rome. Even Italy’s tentative opening is satisfying no one. The nation’s weary virologist­s worry the country will see people crowding bars and restaurant­s and bring yet another spike to the virus that hasn’t receded yet.
(LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) Chairs and tables are prepared outside a restaurant in Rome. Even Italy’s tentative opening is satisfying no one. The nation’s weary virologist­s worry the country will see people crowding bars and restaurant­s and bring yet another spike to the virus that hasn’t receded yet.
 ?? (AP/Gregorio Borgia) ?? A visitor is framed by the large-scale bronze statue of the Capitoline Wolf, a she-wolf milking the twin-founders of Rome, at the Rome’s Capitoline Museum.
(AP/Gregorio Borgia) A visitor is framed by the large-scale bronze statue of the Capitoline Wolf, a she-wolf milking the twin-founders of Rome, at the Rome’s Capitoline Museum.
 ?? (LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) ?? High school students attend a lesson in gym-turned classroom to allow for social distancing after months of limited classroom presence in Rome.
(LaPresse/Cecilia Fabian) High school students attend a lesson in gym-turned classroom to allow for social distancing after months of limited classroom presence in Rome.
 ?? (AP/Gregorio Borgia) ?? A waiter sets a table in an outdoor space of a restaurant in Rome.
(AP/Gregorio Borgia) A waiter sets a table in an outdoor space of a restaurant in Rome.

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