Connecticut Post

Cuomo reinstates NYC indoor dining ban to limit virus spread

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NEW YORK — Indoor dining at New York City restaurant­s will be banned again in an effort to halt the coronaviru­s resurgence, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Friday in an announceme­nt that could foretell a grim winter for one of the city’s most important industries.

As of Monday, only takeout orders and outdoor dining will be allowed in the city, one of the world’s great cuisine capitals, the governor said at a news conference in Albany.

The Democrat had been hinting at a clampdown on indoor dining for a week, saying he was waiting to see if hospitaliz­ation rates stabilized. They have not. Nearly 1,700 patients are now hospitaliz­ed in the city with COVID-19 infections, triple the number a month ago.

Cuomo said that despite the economic pain to the city’s roughly 24,000 restaurant­s and their legions of workers, he needed to act.

“In New York City, you put the CDC caution on indoor dining together with the rate of transmissi­on and the density and the crowding, that is a bad situation,” he said, adding that the shutdown will be evaluated again after two weeks.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said he supported Cuomo’s decision.

“This is painful. So many restaurant­s are struggling. But we can’t allow this virus to reassert itself in our city,“he said on Twitter.

At ilili, a spacious Lebanese-Mediterran­ean restaurant in Manhattan, owner Philippe Massoud said the indoor dining shutdown will likely shrink revenues to 8 percent to 15 percent of normal in the best case scenario.

“It’s going to be very, very difficult,” said Massoud, who’s originally from Lebanon. “I lived through 14 years of civil war, so it’s going to take a lot to extinguish me. But this is very trying.”

Massoud worried that another shutdown may make New York City untenable for restaurant workers who are suffering financiall­y, and for customers questionin­g whether the Big Apple is worth it.

“If you can’t eat out in the city and you can’t have a semblance of life, why are you going to be in the city?” he wonders. “When social life and dining-out life is extinguish­ed in the city, it’s no longer a city.”

The governor’s order came despite opposition from the beleaguere­d restaurant industry, which warned of holiday season layoffs at a time when the federal government has yet to pass additional COVID-19 relief.

“It will be the last straw for countless more restaurant­s and jobs,“said Andrew Rigie, executive director of the NYC Hospitalit­y Alliance. “The restrictio­ns begin on Monday with zero economic support for small businesses that are already struggling to survive.“

Cuomo acknowledg­ed the hardship restaurant­s were facing, but said, “It’s in everyone’s interest to get the virus under control, don’t overwhelm the hospitals, don’t overwhelm the positivity rate.“

The decision comes as wintery weather has started to arrive in New York City, where the outdoor dining setups on sidewalks and in tents on the street are likely to be far less popular amid icy winds and, sometimes, blowing snow.

Public health experts have repeatedly warned that indoor dining — particular­ly in small, crowded restaurant­s where individual­s are drinking and can take off masks when not eating — poses a risk for airborne transmissi­on. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently described such indoor dining as “high risk.”

Other places have also clamped down, like Pennsylvan­ia, which announced Thursday that indoor dining would be banned starting this weekend.

New York’s restaurant­s have been in trouble since the state closed nonessenti­al businesses in March, which forced restaurant­s to rely on takeout and delivery.

As that shutdown was gradually lifted for many types of businesses, restaurant­s remained restricted. The state began allowing indoor dining in some regions outside of New York City in June, and Cuomo allowed indoor dining at 25 percent capacity in the city Sept. 30. In other parts of the state, restaurant­s are allowed to have half their tables filled.

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