Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Winter another hurdle for restaurant­s

- DEE-ANN DURBIN

U.S. restaurant­s are moving warily into fall, hoping their slow recovery persists despite the new challenge of chilly weather and a pandemic that’s expected to claim even more lives.

New York opened indoor dining Wednesday, restrictin­g capacity to 25%. San Francisco may do the same as early as this week. Chicago is raising its indoor capacity from 25% to 40% today, but says restaurant­s still can’t seat more than 50 people in one room.

It’s a dose of reality for an industry that was able to stem at least some of its losses by pivoting to outdoor dining this summer, setting up tables and chairs on sidewalks and parking lots, and offering some semblance of normalcy.

But as temperatur­es start to slide across the country, restaurant­s will have to coax patrons to go back inside, and it’s anyone’s guess how many actually will. That could spell trouble for an industry that has already lost nearly 100,000 U.S. restaurant­s — or 1 in 6 — since the start of the pandemic, according to the National Restaurant Associatio­n. The future remains uncertain for thousands more.

“We’re all a little apprehensi­ve, but that was the case when we started outdoor dining, too,” said Samantha DiStefano, owner of Mama Fox, a restaurant and bar in Brooklyn.

Mama Fox can seat only 18 people inside at 25% capacity, so DiStefano will still rely heavily on her 14 outdoor tables. She thinks many New York restaurant­s won’t open indoor dining until the limit reaches 50% because they can’t cover their costs at 25%.

In the meantime, Mama Fox and others are trying to figure out how to extend the outdoor dining season using space heaters, tents, temporary igloos and even blankets. Heat lamps are already in

short supply.

Restaurant­s are also promoting delivery and carryout. Nearly 70% of 3,500 restaurant­s surveyed in September by the National Restaurant Associatio­n said they added curbside takeout during the pandemic; 54% added delivery.

Philip Moseley, co-owner of Blue Oak BBQ in New Orleans, said carryout demand has risen from 10% of sales before the pandemic to 50% now.

Blue Oak BBQ’s dining room is open at half capacity, or about 20 people. But a tent in the parking lot seats 80. That’s enough traffic that the restaurant was able to hire back all 50 employees.

“You do anything you have to do to make the food work, to make the experience work, to get butts in seats,” Moseley said.

‘NEW SET OF STRUGGLES’

Although fall in New Orleans is ideal for outdoor dining, tourists are scarce and the usual round of festivals won’t happen this year.

“Every day has a new set of struggles,” restaurant coowner Ronnie Evans said.

Seventy percent of U.S. restaurant­s are independen­t, but chains are hurting too. NPC Internatio­nal, the largest franchisee of both Pizza Hut and Wendy’s, filed for bankruptcy protection in July.

Steve Nikolakako­s closed one of his three Manhattan restaurant­s because his landlord wouldn’t give him a break on the rent. Another, Gracie’s Diner, closed for two months in March after two employees died of covid-19.

Even with outdoor seating, the diner is making only 65% of what it did before the pandemic, he said. Still, that’s better than May, when he was doing only 30% of his usual business.

“This is the worst thing I have ever seen,” said Nikolakako­s, a 40-year veteran of the industry.

Il Carino, a tiny Italian restaurant in Manhattan, is reopening its dining room with just 12 seats. Outdoor seating has recaptured only about 30% of the restaurant’s business, and it has had to lay off 13 workers, said Giolio Alvarez, the restaurant’s manager.

Alvarez said customers are asking for heat lamps, but the restaurant doesn’t know if they’re worth the extra money. And increasing menu prices is off the table.

“How are we going to increase prices?” he said. “Everyone is broke.”

Monthly U.S. restaurant sales hit their lowest point in April, when they plunged to $30 billion, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That was less than half the amount restaurant­s made a year earlier.

Sales steadily improved as lockdowns ended, carryout demand picked up and states allowed to-go alcohol. U.S. restaurant sales hit $55 billion in August, but that’s still $10 billion less than last year.

Some waiters and kitchen staffers have gone back to work. Restaurant employment rose by 3.6 million people over the four months ending in August, according to government data. Still, there were 2.5 million fewer U.S. restaurant workers in August compared with February. September’s unemployme­nt numbers are due out Friday.

WARY CUSTOMERS

Even if restaurant­s rehire staffs, reopen dining rooms or shell out $1,000 for fiberglass igloos, there’s no guarantee customers will return.

Nancy Chapman used to eat out often, at restaurant­s near her College Grove, Tenn., home and on the road when she traveled to horse shows. But Chapman, 70, who recently retired from her accounting and business management practice, said she isn’t going to restaurant­s until she is satisfied there is a better understand­ing of covid-19 and a clear path to its resolution.

Juliana Gonzalez, 31, of Howard Beach, N.Y., is also trying to stay safe. She limits her contacts to her parents and her boyfriend, and she has walked out of dining rooms in New Jersey when she felt they were too crowded. But she’s also ready for some normalcy, and she’s eager for dining rooms to reopen in New York.

“I feel that most restaurant­s are trying to stay open, so most of them are trying their best to be safe,” Gonzalez said.

 ?? (AP/Kathy Willens) ?? Mama Fox bar and restaurant owner Samantha DiStefano (center) discusses her indoor dining reopening plans with manager Akin Payne as bartender Devon Schickling prepares drinks for outdoor diners Tuesday in New York. The establishm­ent was preparing to serve patrons indoors for the first time since March.
(AP/Kathy Willens) Mama Fox bar and restaurant owner Samantha DiStefano (center) discusses her indoor dining reopening plans with manager Akin Payne as bartender Devon Schickling prepares drinks for outdoor diners Tuesday in New York. The establishm­ent was preparing to serve patrons indoors for the first time since March.

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