Houston Chronicle

Restaurant relief fund proving to be key lifeline

- By Eric Schwartzbe­rg

DAYTON, Ohio — A year after the first restaurant­s were ordered to close because of the COVID-19 pandemic, a new fund is expected to throw a lifeline to restaurant­s still staggering from losses sustained in 2020.

The American Rescue Plan Act, which was signed into law last week by President Joe Biden, means the creation of the $28.6 billion Restaurant Revitaliza­tion Fund and a new federal program for restaurant owners with 20 or fewer locations.

Operators can apply for tax-free grants of up to $5 million per location, or up to $10 million for multi-location operations, according to the National Restaurant Associatio­n. The grant amount is determined by subtractin­g 2020 sales from 2019 revenues.

Tacoyia Redmon, coowner of downtown Dayton’s Olive Mediterran­ean Grill, said the fund is “a brilliant idea.”

“It’s a good way to give back to the community, and try to give people that extra push that they need so we can move forward,” Redmon said. “I know a lot of small businesses struggle, in general, and with the simple fact that COVID came around, it made a huge impact on a lot of business owners. Some of them even lost their businesses.”

Since restaurant­s shut down in March 2020, food service sales have fallen $255 billion and 110,000 restaurant­s have closed, according to the National Restaurant Associatio­n.

Similar to the Paycheck Protection Program, Restaurant Revitaliza­tion Fund grants will be distribute­d by the Small Business Administra­tion and can be spent on a wider range of expenses than previous relief programs. That includes mortgages or rent, utilities, supplies, food and beverage inventory, payroll, and operationa­l expenses.

About $5 billion of the fund will be set aside for restaurant­s with gross receipts under $500,000 and, for the first three weeks of the applicatio­n period, the Small Business Administra­tion will prioritize awarding grants for women-, veteran-, or socially and economical­ly disadvanta­ged-owned businesses, the National Restaurant Associatio­n said.

Olive Mediterran­ean Grill saw revenues dip by as much as 30 percent in 2020, Redmon said.

“Luckily ... we are blessed and we’re still kicking,” she said. “We’re losing a little bit of money because we used to do a lot of catering orders, at least a couple a week, and now we barely get a couple a month only because people are not (together).”

Redmon said the business getting approved for the grant would especially useful in helping cover expenses.

Bill Castro, co-owner of third-generation, familyowne­d restaurant El Meson in West Carrollton, Ohio, said he was “thrilled” to hear about the grant and hopes his 43-year-old business can qualify.

“I’d like to think that this is exactly what’s going to be needed to be that next step to really solidify this so we can get back on track,” Castro said. “I mean, our sales, we lost half a million dollars just in one month in December with the sales we would have had with holiday parties, with events, with things that would have normally been what we would have done in 2019, we lost out on in 2020, and that was just one month.”

Castro said the grants could be the catalyst to help restaurant­s “ramp back up again” and solidify efforts to revive the industry and save businesses and jobs nationwide.

At the start of the pandemic, the National Restaurant Associatio­n sent a plan to Congress urging the creation of an industry-specific relief program. It worked with Congress and both the Trump and Biden administra­tions toward ensuring restaurant­s had “as many tools and supports as possible to survive,” the associatio­n said.

“We are still a long way from full recovery and it’s likely more grant money will be needed to get us there, but today the industry has hope for the future,” Tom Bene, president & CEO of the National Restaurant Associatio­n, said in a statement.

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