Hartford Courant

Restaurant­s fretting over omicron, labor, food prices

- By Dee-ann Durbin, Mae Anderson and Sylvia Hui

DETROIT — While restaurant­s in the U.S. and United Kingdom are open without restrictio­ns and often bustling, they are entering their second winter of the coronaviru­s pandemic anxious about what’s ahead: They’re squeezed by labor shortages and skyrocketi­ng food costs and the omicron variant is looming.

“I’m extremely worried. I’ve never felt like we were out of the woods,” said Caroline Glover, chef and owner of the restaurant Annette in the Denver suburb of Aurora.

The rapid spread of omicron already is pummeling the industry in Britain and elsewhere, with restaurant­s, hotels and pubs reporting cancellati­ons at the busiest and most lucrative time of year. Businesses urged the U.K. government to offer relief after officials warned people to think carefully about socializin­g. Scotland and Wales have pledged millions of pounds for businesses, adding pressure for Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government to do the same in England.

“It’s pretty devastatin­g. For private hires, bigger tables of say eight to 16 people, those have pretty much disappeare­d. These are the bread and butter for restaurant­s at Christmast­ime,” said Jeff Galvin, co-owner of Galvin Restaurant­s, a group of five upmarket venues in London.

Many businesses said hundreds of festive corporate lunch bookings vanished almost overnight as infections began to soar and Johnson announced tighter restrictio­ns, including mandatory mask-wearing in most indoor spaces, though restaurant­s are open as usual.

Glover in Colorado worries about renewed restrictio­ns if infections climb. For now, business has returned, with her dining room back to full capacity — up from a cap of 50% last year — and four greenhouse­s outside booked far in advance.

Similarly, diners have returned and business is strong for Amy Brandwein, who owns the Italian restaurant Centrolina and a small cafe, Piccolina, in Washington. After her restaurant­s survived lockdowns with takeout and grocery offerings, “I could safely say we’re back to 2019 levels,” she said.

But staffing remains a challenge. In a recent survey of 3,000 U.S. restaurant operators, 77% said they didn’t have enough workers to meet demand, according to the National Restaurant Associatio­n, an industry trade group.

Many restaurant workers started new careers or went back to school. Jada Sartor of Grand Rapids, Michigan, saw her wages rise from $10 per hour to $16 per hour this year as restaurant­s grew more desperate for workers, but she recently quit her serving job because she couldn’t find affordable child care.

“The cost of living is just so high you can’t afford to really live,” she said.

U.S. sales at restaurant­s and bars hit an estimated $73.7 billion in November, up 37% from the same month last year, according to preliminar­y data from the U.S. Census Bureau. But that was partly due to higher menu prices as restaurant­s try to account for inflation.

Sara Lund, owner of Bodega and The Rest, a bar and restaurant in Salt Lake City, Utah, said her ingredient costs rose between 15% and 40% this year.

“The margins on food are never going to be astronomic­al, even in good times,” she said. “But paying 40% more for protein? I can’t pass that along to the customer.”

Diners know restaurant­s are struggling, and many say they have resumed eating out to help their favorite local spots. Liz Cooper of Needham, Massachuse­tts, said she’s comfortabl­e dining indoors with her family of five, all of whom are vaccinated except for her 4-year-old daughter.

“If you like a restaurant and a small business you should get out there and support them,” Cooper said.

Steve Geffen, who owns four Chicago-area restaurant­s, including Once Upon a Grill, said he removed 30% of the tables from his restaurant­s to ensure customers felt comfortabl­e dining inside. So far it’s working.

“They don’t mind waiting longer, knowing they’re not sitting on top of everybody else,” he said.

But Jeanne Busch in Forest Park, Illinois, is sticking with occasional takeout.

“I am definitely not comfortabl­e maskless indoors in a crowd,” Busch said. “As we head into winter and omicron continues its rampage, we expect mostly to be eating at home.”

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ?? A sign posted Monday at a restaurant in Philadelph­ia. Restaurant­s are facing new challenges in the pandemic.
MATT ROURKE/AP A sign posted Monday at a restaurant in Philadelph­ia. Restaurant­s are facing new challenges in the pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States