Los Angeles Times

Restaurant­s react to rules with defiance and lawsuits

Some stay open despite pandemic restrictio­ns

- By Anh Do and Luke Money

Dino Ferraro texted friends from a concrete bench next to the Huntington Beach Pier on Monday as he tried to sort out his worries.

He has mounting bills — more than $ 100,000 from back rent owed for his two restaurant­s, Capone’s Italian Cucina and Black Trumpet Bistro, both a quick drive from the water.

He spent thousands of dollars deep- cleaning and disinfecti­ng both businesses, three times each in the last months, he said, along with complying “with every demand required.”

Now, like thousands of other restaurant­s in much of

California, he began Monday with a new set of restrictio­ns, including a suspension of outdoor dining that had been a lifeline for his business.

California officials issued the stay- at- home order as coronaviru­s cases continue surging to unpreceden­ted levels, pushing hospitals’ precious intensive care beds

perilously close to capacity. And officials warn the situation will probably get worse before it gets better as more people who were infected over Thanksgivi­ng weekend fall ill.

Health experts have said this period is among the most dangerous points of the pandemic as COVID- 19 spreads rapidly through the state.

But for Ferraro and others, the economic toll poses its own existentia­l threat. While many businesses in areas covered by the state’s new regional stay- at- home order appear to be complying, some are trying to figure out ways to keep their businesses going.

Ferraro said he is “experiment­ing” with staying open, offering outdoor dining and a few indoor tables spread 12 feet from one another at both locations.

He had to close during lunch but is happy to provide masks for people coming by for dinner who neglected to bring them.

He said he and his family are “not in denial about the virus, but we have to move forward. We have to make a living. We do feel for the people at risk. They should stay home.”

The timing of the state’s latest order is the newest blow, in a year full of them, for many businesses — which have been battered by coronaviru­s- related restrictio­ns — and to the psyche of California­ns, who for months have lived with its threat hanging over their heads.

Officials, though, have said desperate times call for drastic measures. The number of new daily coronaviru­s cases has skyrockete­d to a level that would have been unthinkabl­e weeks ago. California hospitals are already contending with an unpreceden­ted wave of more than 10,000 COVID- 19 patients, and the state is on the brink of recording its 20,000th death from the illness.

“Once people die, they’re gone from our lives forever — and there’s no way to measure that impact at all,” L. A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said during a briefing Monday. “And every death is a tragedy, particular­ly those deaths that, in some ways, if we were all better at doing our part, we could be preventing right now.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the new round of restrictio­ns last week, saying stricter interventi­on was needed to shore up the state’s hospital system and make sure intensive care beds remained available.

A region is required to implement a state- defined stay- at- home order — which restricts retail capacity to 20% and shuts down outdoor restaurant dining, hair salons, nail salons, public outdoor playground­s, card rooms, museums, zoos, aquariums and wineries — if its available ICU capacity drops below 15%.

Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley are already below that threshold — as of Monday their ICU availabili­ty had tumbled to 10.9% and 6.3%, respective­ly.

The Southern California region encompasse­s Imperial, Inyo, Los Angeles, Mono, Orange, Riverside,

San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara and Ventura counties.

On Monday, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara and Ventura counties said they might seek approval from the state to create their own Central Coast region, allowing them to assess restrictio­ns without being tied to the much more heavily populated counties to the south.

“Being kept in the Southern California region any longer could cause preventabl­e educationa­l and economic hardships to communitie­s in the Central Coast Region,” Ventura County officials said in a statement.

Dr. Robert Kim- Farley, a medical epidemiolo­gist and infectious disease expert at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, said he thought the state’s regional approach was reasonable, given that if, say, Ventura County’s ICUs were overloaded, L. A. County’s hospitals have historical­ly been called upon to help.

With a court case being heard on Tuesday challengin­g L. A. County’s ban on outdoor dining, Ferrer declined to comment on the lawsuit but did say there is ample evidence that explains why outdoor restaurant dining is too risky to allow now, with the virus so much more widespread than before.

“We could tolerate that risk before,” Ferrer said, when only 1 in 800 people in L. A. County were out and about and contagious with the virus. Now that 1 in 145 are contagious and the hospital system is about to be overwhelme­d, “you have to look at all of the activities and say: ‘ We need to reduce risk as much as possible everywhere.’ ”

One of the cities covered under the new state order is Huntington Beach in Orange County, which has long been a hotbed of resistance to pandemic- inspired government­al restrictio­ns and even to wearing masks. But its pier and downtown district were fairly quiet Monday, just after the new rules took effect.

An exception was Basilico’s, a restaurant that has garnered national attention for promoting a no- mask rule — and received support in the process from local and visiting customers.

Drivers pulled up steadily Monday to pick up their orders of chicken parmesan and other rustic- style dishes. Inside, workers said they were almost sold out of their $ 25 T- shirts emblazoned with the phrase, “Leave the mask, take the cannoli,” a play on words inspired by the film “The Godfather.”

“If other restaurant­s would just be brave enough to open up, like this one, the economy would improve,” said Roxanne Marie, a diner from Lakewood who was eating with two friends. “These officials are clamping down and they probably don’t want anyone dying on their watch. But you know, people are dying, and that’s from broken hearts, loneliness and depression. We can’t stay home all the time, there’s nothing to do.”

It’s unclear if restaurant­s that defy the ban will face action from local or state officials. Orange County’s sheriff has said his deputies would not be dispatched to calls involving face coverings, gatherings or stayat- home rules, calling compliance “a matter of personal responsibi­lity and not a matter of law enforcemen­t.”

Some Orange County leaders say they are lobbying the governor to not lump their county in the same region as L. A., which has been harder hit by COVID- 19.

Ferraro, who grew up helping his mother make pizza and lasagna, says he is not just concerned about himself. He said he has 58 employees and that means “58 families are getting fed — how can we think of layoffs?”

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? CUSTOMERS dine outdoors at Cronies Sports Grill in Agoura Hills on Monday, hours after a state order put into place further coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times CUSTOMERS dine outdoors at Cronies Sports Grill in Agoura Hills on Monday, hours after a state order put into place further coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

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