San Antonio Express-News

Restaurant­s adapt again as virus cases climb again

- By Julie Creswell and Gillian Friedman

Executives at the Brazilian steakhouse chain Fogo de Chão thought they had seen the worst of it.

Earlier in the year, when seemingly each hour brought news of another city or state abruptly shutting down because of the pandemic, executives switched from email to the messaging system WhatsApp to communicat­e in real time with the general managers of their 43 U.S.-based restaurant­s scattered around the country.

“The first time we heard a state issue a stay-at-home order, we were like, ‘ What does that mean? What are they talking about?’” said Barry McGowan, the company’s CEO “Then it was like dominoes falling.”

Communicat­ing with vendors was hit or miss.

Trucks full of food pulled up to restaurant­s that had been closed.

The chain created a takeout menu in just three days. It reached out to landlords to negotiate breaks on its leases. And as orders to stay closed were lifted, it spent about $1 million renting tents and other equipment to set up outdoor dining at many of its restaurant­s where indoor dining was still restricted.

For a while, it worked. Diners flocked to the restaurant­s and spent lavishly. Before the pandemic, Fogo de Chão sold about 500 premium steaks, such as Wagyu and Tomahawk rib-eyes, per week. That shot up to 1,300 per week by July.

But with coronaviru­s cases rising again across the country, new restrictio­ns have been placed on indoor and outdoor dining, though they are far from uniform (no indoor dining in Philadelph­ia, Chicago and New York City; indoor dining curfews in New Jersey and Massachuse­tts; no restaurant dining at all in much of California). For larger dine-in chains such as Fogo de Chão, the ever-changing patchwork of rules poses a particular logistical challenge: How do you come up with a companywid­e approach when different locations are dealing with their own specific regulation­s?

“What you have is a massive deviation from standard in terms of howa chain is operating restaurant locations in different states, which then requires a whole set of processes and management to make sure that you comply with the regulation­s,” said Sean Ryan, a partner at Kearney, a consulting firm. “It’s costly and time-consuming.”

Restaurant­s must work with local health department­s that hand down specific guidance on measures that must be taken to prevent the spread of the virus. Some require outdoor dining tents or structures that have no more than two walls to provide adequate ventilatio­n. Others want three sides of tents to remain open.

And just as they did earlier in the pandemic, restaurant­s are quickly adapting again by shifting deliveries of food, alcohol, linens and other products from locations that are temporaril­y closed to ones that remain open. Some are doing the same with personnel.

“Restaurate­urs are in a state of despair,” said Phil Kafarakis, an industry analyst and the former chief innovation officer for the National Restaurant Associatio­n. “People are in total panic mode right now and are starting to take drastic measures to continue to survive.”

The restaurant industry has been clobbered by the pandemic. By some estimates, nearly 110,000 restaurant­s have permanentl­y closed, and 2.1 million employees remained unemployed as of October. Several large casual and upscale dining chains such as Chuck E. Cheese, California Pizza Kitchen and some Il Mulino restaurant­s spiraled into bankruptcy.

The new restrictio­ns come at a rough time because the holiday season is typically the busiest period for the industry.

Maggiano’s Little

Italy

chain, which operates more than 50 restaurant­s in the U.S., typically would be filled with company parties and family celebratio­ns at this time of year.

But because of various dining restrictio­ns, 2020 would be different, executives at Brinker Internatio­nal, which owns Maggiano’s and Chili’s Grill and Bar, warned Wall Street analysts in September. “Our anticipati­on right now is, we won’t see that same similar environmen­t playing out,” said Joe Taylor, Brinker’s chief financial officer.

Still, in many ways, the large dine-in chains are better positioned for the new restrictio­ns than they were in the spring.

“There were so many unknown variables during the springtime,” said R.J. Hottovy, an analyst at consulting firm Aaron Allen & Associates. “This time around, restaurant operators had a specific game plan in place.”

The first time around, left with empty dining rooms, casual and upscale dining chains moved quickly to beef up or offer to-go options. They launched curbside pickup and signed on with food delivery partners such as DoorDash and Grubhub. Some states loosened liquor laws, allowing chains to offer alcoholic beverages for takeout. And when restaurant­s were allowed to serve diners again, with restrictio­ns, many rented tents or opened up patios to create outdoor seating.

But chains saw uneven performanc­e among their restaurant­s.

By the end of summer, Ol

ive Garden restaurant­s were averaging $70,000 in sales per week. But sales at the chain’s superstar restaurant in Times Square in New York, which was offering only takeout during the summer, plummeted to $17,500 per week, downfrom roughly $288,000 per week, executives of Darden Restaurant­s, which owns Olive Garden, LongHorn Steakhouse and the Capital Grille, told Wall Street analysts in September.

Darden’s stock, along with that of many restaurant companies, bounced back this fall and winter, partly on the success many have had in offering to-go or outdoor dining, as well as the expectatio­n that diners will return in droves to eating out once vaccines become widely available in the U.S.

A few weeks ago, the caipirinha­s flowed freely and Wagyu rib-eye steaks sizzled as they were delivered to diners under a tent at the Fogo de Chão in Beverly Hills, Calif. The location was the chain’s busiest, but many of its other restaurant­s were also rebounding strongly.

By early November, the chain, which is based in Plano and was acquired in 2018 by the investment firm Rhone Capital, was making 93 percent of the revenues it had made at the same time last year and had hired back about 90 percent of the employees who had been furloughed earlier in the year. Sixteen of its restaurant­s located largely in states with fewer dining restrictio­ns were seeing higher sales than those last year.

But as states have put in

new restrictio­ns, Fogo de Chão has gone back to its earlier playbook. It is moving food around and a few weeks ago reached out again to landlords to negotiate lease payments.

The once-bustling tent in Beverly Hills sits empty after health officials shut down outdoor dining in Los Angeles County for three weeks. About 2,300 miles away in a suburb of Detroit, another tent sits empty. Fogo de Chão had to remove three sides of the tent, per local health regulation­s, and now has to figure out a way to add barriers to block the freezing winds.

But inside a cozy tent with a “Winter Wonderland” theme in Rosemont, Ill., a suburb of Chicago, where restaurant­s need only two side panels open, customers are able to nosh on shrimp cocktails and sip on bottles of South American wine every night as they sit around heaters and under twinkling lights with Christmas music spilling through speakers.

In an effort to keep as many workers employed as possible, Fogo de Chão is offering to shift some employees from locations that are temporaril­y closed to ones that are thriving, including those in Rosemont, Dallas, Las Vegas and Orlando, Fla.

“Our goal is to keep our employees employed through the holidays,” CEO McGowan said. “Our hope is that in January we can open up our patios and tents in parking lots again. And then the vaccine will come, and hopefully by March or April, we’re back to some sort of normal.”

 ?? Lyndon French / New York Times ?? Patrons dine in an outdoor area of a Fogo de Chão in Rosemont, Ill. Some of the chain’s locations are temporaril­y closed, but the one in Rosemont is thriving.
Lyndon French / New York Times Patrons dine in an outdoor area of a Fogo de Chão in Rosemont, Ill. Some of the chain’s locations are temporaril­y closed, but the one in Rosemont is thriving.

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