New York Post

Cuo’s Draconian Restaurant Rules

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New data from the NYC Hospitalit­y Alliance show that nine in 10 city restaurant­s couldn’t pay their rent in December, yet Gov. Cuomo is still capping indoor dining in the city at 25 percent occupancy. That won’t keep eateries from going under.

The survey showed that 92 percent of more than 400 respondent­s couldn’t afford to pay rent in December — up from 80 percent in June and 88 percent in October. Because they have their own bills to pay, only 36 percent of landlords formally deferred restaurant­s’ rent, while 14 percent have renegotiat­ed leases during the pandemic.

Eateries saw some mercy: About 58 percent reported that the landlord had waived more than 50 percent of the rent owed. But that can’t last forever.

Again, Cuomo’s restrictio­ns are senseless.

Why let the rest of the state open at 50 percent, but not the city? Why limit restaurant hours at all? It’s not like COVID is more transmissi­ble after 11 p.m. This is as absurd and tyrannical as the gov’s earlier rule that bar patrons had to buy a meal, too.

As one frustrated restaurant manager told The Post, “Every time the restrictio­ns change, we’ve had to hire people back and forth, let people go again.”

Cuomo justifies the 25 percent limit by citing the greater density of seating in many city establishm­ents. But that’s just his guess. Science — the state’s own data on COVID cases — shows that bars and restaurant­s are extremely low risk for bug transmissi­on.

New York City needs to start righting its economy, and the governor needs to get out of the way.

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