Lodi News-Sentinel

Some Napa businesses defy orders

- By Colleen Shalby

Terry Letson watched business at his restaurant in California’s Napa valley drop by 25% over the last six weeks. With no help yet from the state, no uptick in coronaviru­s cases in the county and still no sign of a lifting of restrictio­ns on his eatery before Mother’s Day — the busiest day of the year for restaurant­s — enough was enough.

“We’re protecting the people that are high-risk at the sacrifice of our well-being, income and livelihood,” he said. “When the cure is more damaging than the disease, we’re in trouble.”

Defying county orders, Letson, 58, reopened his Fume Bistro on Monday after weeks of following state rules and serving only takeout. The tables are set 10 feet apart, employees are temperatur­e-checked every morning and only 45 people are allowed inside the 18year-old establishm­ent, which typically serves up to 100 people at a time, Letson said.

Public health officials have already visited him in person and informed Letson by email that they will attempt to shut down the restaurant by Thursday. But he’s undeterred.

“It’s been 47 days now. At some point we need to move on a bit.”

The restaurant typically employs 36 individual­s, but is currently allowing 11 people with the largest families and no other means of income to work part time.

Napa County has reported 75 COVID-19 infections among its roughly 138,000 residents and two deaths — one of the lowest numbers in a state that has seen nearly 59,000 infections and more than 2,400 deaths.

As Gov. Gavin Newsom has announced that certain restrictio­ns on businesses will be modified as early as Friday, counties throughout the state have pressed for faster and more liberal action amid ongoing protests to reopen the state. Some, such as Sutter and Yuba counties, reopened ahead of the state’s permission.

“They’re making a big mistake. They’re putting their public at risk. They’re putting our progress at risk,” Newsom said during a briefing Tuesday in Sacramento about those counties. “These are real exceptions. The overwhelmi­ng majority of California­ns are playing by the rules doing the right thing.”

Letson said county leaders for Napa Valley have yet to take such steps, despite the low numbers in comparison to a hot spot such as Los Angeles County, which accounts for the majority of the state’s COVID19 deaths. He and other business owners are instead taking action independen­tly.

The restaurant’s reopening came as a nearby art gallery announced last week that it would reopen Monday, despite the county’s orders, so it could support the 30 artists and employees who rely on the gallery for income. Quent Cordair Fine Art encouraged other businesses to do the same.

 ?? ROBERT DURELL/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Wine grape leaves cling to the vines in the late fall sun along Silverado Trail in Napa Valley on Dec. 7, 2006.
ROBERT DURELL/LOS ANGELES TIMES Wine grape leaves cling to the vines in the late fall sun along Silverado Trail in Napa Valley on Dec. 7, 2006.

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