Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Restaurant­s and bars in Chicago, suburban Cook Co. reopen for indoor service

Chicago bars, restaurant­s officially cleared to reopen for indoor service: ‘It feels good to be back’

- BY MADELINE KENNEY, STAFF REPORTER mkenney@suntimes.com | @madkenney

Restaurate­urs across Chicago and Cook County breathed a sigh of relief Saturday as Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s health team officially allowed them to invite customers back for indoor service for the first time in more than two months.

It was welcome news for many customers, too, including Marcus Brezina, who, with his family, was among the first back through the doors at Corcoran’s Grill and Pub in Old Town.

“It feels good to be back inside,” Brezina said in the front dining room of the Irish pub. “The precaution­s are taken seriously, and that’s what you want as a patron when you come in. They’re taking the right steps.”

And it took a lot of steps to get there. The governor shut down indoor service at restaurant­s statewide in November as coronaviru­s infection rates soared to unpreceden­ted heights. But with most COVID-19 metrics back down to their lowest levels since October, Pritzker so far has put indoor service back on the menu for businesses in eight of the state’s 11 regions.

Chicago and suburban Cook County improved to the state’s Tier 1 mitigation level, which allows restaurant­s and bars that serve food to seat customers indoors at 25% capacity or 25 people per room, whichever is less. Bars that don’t serve food aren’t allowed to reopen in Chicago unless they partner with a restaurant to deliver on site.

That’s good news for a hospitalit­y industry that has been almost completely shut down for about half the pandemic.

“Obviously, 25 people is not a big number, but it’s a hell of a lot bigger than zero,” said Kevin Vaughan, who had to lay off employees at several of his six restaurant­s across the city. “We are absolutely excited to move forward . ... It allows people to put people back on the payroll. It’s a step we needed to take, and we’re heading in the right direction. That’s the biggest thing for us.”

Owners of Valois Restaurant said they feared the Hyde Park eatery wouldn’t make it without the return of at least some indoor tabs.

“We’re trying to make ends meet, working for free and no profits and being in the red and just trying to stick around for our customers, our employees,” said longtime coowner

Gianni Colamussi, who said he went weeks without pay in order to keep the restaurant alive.

“I live in Indiana, so things have been open for me. So when I come here, it’s a shock because things have been closed,” customer Lashel Norris said at the South Side diner. “I’m happy that everything is open, and they seem like they’re being pretty safe with the spacing.”

As industry leaders and Mayor Lori Lightfoot pushed the governor to bring back limited indoor service, Pritzker pointed to studies that have suggested bars and restaurant­s

can be hotbeds for viral transmissi­ons. He also warned Friday that, with the more infectious UK variant of the virus detected in Chicago, restrictio­ns could return “if we aren’t extremely careful.”

Colamussi and Vaughan said businesses are doing everything in their power to ensure indoor dining is here to stay.

“The risk of catching COVID in a restaurant or bar should be absolutely minimal because we’re taking all the right precaution­s and following the rules. We’re well-ventilated and in compliance with the Tier 1 mitigation requiremen­ts,” Vaughan said.

Either way, Vaughan said, it’ll take years for the industry to recover from the fallout of the pandemic.

“It’s going to take a long time for the restaurant industry in the city of Chicago to bounce back for a number of reasons,’’ he said. ‘‘Business travel, tourism and convention­s will be down dramatical­ly, and then people’s habits, of course, have changed dramatical­ly over the last six months. It’s going to take awhile for us to get consumers confident in coming back into our restaurant­s and dining rooms, so it’s not going to be an immediate, short-term quick fix.”

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Separated by a plastic barrier, Valois Restaurant staff serve a customer on Saturday in Hyde Park.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Separated by a plastic barrier, Valois Restaurant staff serve a customer on Saturday in Hyde Park.

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