Chicago Sun-Times

Mayor threatens to shut down bars, restaurant­s that violate COVID rules

Mayor vows to crack down on establishm­ents flouting health guidelines

- FRAN SPIELMAN REPORTS,

Mayor Lori Lightfoot threatened Thursday to shut down bars and restaurant­s that defy the city’s 50-person or 25% capacity limit — whichever is less — and warned, “If we shut you down, you’re not coming back any time soon.”

Last weekend, Chicago bars and restaurant­s finally were allowed to reopen to indoor dining, but with strict limits on capacity and social distancing to fight the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Business Affairs and Consumer Protection Commission­er Rosa Escareno said then compliance would be policed by complaint only because she simply doesn’t have the staff to conduct random inspection­s. She urged Chicagoans who walk into crowded restaurant­s, bars and gyms to call 311.

But then Lightfoot started seeing “images of crowding and outright disregard for social distancing and face coverings” popping up on social media.

That’s when the mayor who shut down the lakefront because Chicagoans couldn’t be trusted to maintain social distance decided to make a similar threat to bars and restaurant­s fighting for survival after the stay-home shutdown.

She ordered Escareno to “ramp up” enforcemen­t — by issuing fines as high as $10,000 and shutting down bars and restaurant­s that are the most “egregious” violators.

Lightfoot delivered the tough-love message Thursday during a conference call that included “several hundred” bar and restaurant owners. She told them the July Fourth holiday weekend was “make-or-break” for them. Abide by the rules or “suffer the consequenc­es.”

After three months of stay-at-home sacrifice and mandatory shutdowns that bent the coronaviru­s curve, she won’t allow Chicago to suffer the same fate as other cities and states now “on fire” with new cases because they “threw the barn door open and let people have at it,” she said.

“Business owners, your fate is in your hands. I don’t want to have to shut you down. But if you make me, I will,’’ she said.

“We’re not playing with this. I’ve heard a lot of complaints: ‘Mayor, it’s so difficult. …

All kinds of excuses. … We’re gonna be out and we’re gonna be active and we’re gonna be looking . ... And if you are shut down, you’re not coming back any time soon.”

Escareno said inspectors would be “out there in task force manner” with employees of the police, fire and public health department­s.

“The time for awareness and education is over and the time to be serious about keeping our city safe starts now.”

She advised businesses to “refuse entry” to anyone not wearing face masks or refusing to maintain social distance and follow capacity rules.

“I have seen standing-room-only at rooftops and bars. … Patrons must be seated at all times. I have seen lines outdoors and congregati­ng with no masks and no social distancing. … It is the responsibi­lity of the business to address that. If you cannot manage your line, then go with reservatio­ns only. If you refuse to manage the line, then unfortunat­ely, we’re gonna have to manage it for you,” she said.

“I have also seen cocktails sold for immediate consumptio­n on the street. … And most alarming, I have seen a few cases with really packed bars as though we are not in a crisis. … Businesses must take the guidelines seriously. The health of our city, the health of our economy truly depends on it.”

Illinois Restaurant Associatio­n President Sam Toia said the mayor’s warning is understand­able, given backslidin­g in other states.

Toia said he’s concerned a few bad apples could cost him another shutdown, and pleaded with his members: “Please follow the guidelines, so we can stay safe and stay open.”

Police tactics and children shot

Talk of shutting down bars and restaurant­s dominated a news conference that was supposed to be about preventing a continuati­on of the recent outbreak of violence that is killing and maiming Chicago’s children.

On that front, there was nothing new beyond the earlier promise to sweep drug corners and flood the streets with violence interrupte­rs and 1,200 police officers working days off.

“I want to stop and eliminate entirely the pipeline of our young men to the streets,”

Keeping Chicago safe is “not just the business of our police department . ... It’s on all of us,” Lightfoot said.

She urged those considerin­g violence to “find your humanity” and think about the children, including a 20-month-old killed and a 3-year-old wounded, just in the last week.

“This cannot be who we are as a city,” mayor said.

 ??  ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot
Mayor Lori Lightfoot
 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Customers eat at Broken English Taco Pub in Old Town on June 26, the first day Illinois began allowing indoor dine-in since the coronaviru­s pandemic hit Chicago in March.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Customers eat at Broken English Taco Pub in Old Town on June 26, the first day Illinois began allowing indoor dine-in since the coronaviru­s pandemic hit Chicago in March.

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