Lake County Record-Bee

As COVID soars, a chaotic moment for California, a dire one for restaurant­s

- — Hoeven, CALMatters

As Thanksgivi­ng approaches, the mood in California isn’t too festive.

Los Angeles County, which will ban outdoor dining starting today, is considerin­g another stayat-home- order that would bar residents from leaving their homes unless they’re essential workers or accessing essential services. Ninety-four percent of California residents are currently under a curfew, and more could join them today, the state’s top health official warned Monday. And Gov. Gavin Newsom, still under fire for the French Laundry debacle, is quarantini­ng at home at a critical inflection point for the state.

Amid a 77% increase in hospitaliz­ations and 55% increase in intensive-care admissions, tensions are flaring up across the state. Protests against the curfew broke out in Huntington Beach, Redding, Fresno and other cities. A surge in weekend gun violence propelled Los Angeles to surpass 300 homicides in one year for the first time in a decade. Unemployme­nt claims are rising again. Late-night and Los Angeles restaurant­s that had counted on remaining open over the Thanksgivi­ng holiday are now facing massive losses for outdoor tents and heaters they won’t be able to use.

Christy Vega Fowler, owner of the Casa Vega restaurant in Sherman Oaks: “It’s an impossible game that doesn’t make any sense. … They told us we could operate with outdoor dining, we did it safely, we made the investment, and then they take it away from us. It’s devastatin­g.”

And although many county sheriffs aren’t en

forcing the curfew, the state Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control is threatenin­g noncomplia­nt restaurant­s and bars with fines or revoked liquor licenses. It’s yet another frustratio­n for restaurant­s, a group of which sued government agencies last month to recoup millions in liquor, health and tourism fees.

 ?? IMAGE VIA ISTOCK ?? General Motors announced Monday that it would no longer support the Trump administra­tion in lawsuits challengin­g the Golden State’s authority to set its own fuel economy standards
IMAGE VIA ISTOCK General Motors announced Monday that it would no longer support the Trump administra­tion in lawsuits challengin­g the Golden State’s authority to set its own fuel economy standards

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