San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Restaurant­s: With buildings vacant, break- ins make dire situation worse.

- By Justin Phillips

Beleaguere­d San Francisco restaurant­s are struggling with a recent citywide rise in burglaries, including a slew of brazen breakins at popular restaurant­s between the Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas holidays. It’s a situation many restaurant owners say is exacerbati­ng an already bleak outlook for the local food scene.

San Francisco Police Department data shows burglaries in the city climbed from 4,918 reported incidents a year ago to 7,248 as of Dec. 27. The data does not specifical­ly show how many restaurant­s have been affected, but the rise in burglaries is reflected in the stories being told by business owners in interviews and on social media. It’s a hard reality for local restaurant­s that have now gone almost 10 months with diminished revenue, forced hibernatio­n periods, and only occasional approval for indoor and outdoor dining service.

In midDecembe­r alone, San Francisco’s nostalgic Toy Boat Dessert Cafe posted on Instagram about having had its door kicked in during an attempted burglary. Also in the Richmond District, Cassava took to social media to post about losing roughly $ 3,000 worth of equipment, including iPads, after a breakin. And Epic Steak and Waterbar on the Embarcader­o each lost a similar amount when thieves stole alcohol and damaged property.

Owners say the shelterinp­lace order provides thieves with opportunit­ies to break into businesses. Streets are empty because people are staying home. The ghosttown effect is increased as a growing number of restaurant­s and other businesses are either permanentl­y or temporaril­y closed. The breakins are all the more painful when restaurant­s aren’t even bringing in income to cover the cost to repair or replace stolen or damaged items.

Pete Sittnick, the managing partner of Epic Steak and Waterbar restaurant­s, said even before factoring in property crime, each restaurant is losing $ 50,000 each month while temporaril­y closed.

“Right now, for people that run restaurant­s you almost don’t even want to have your lights on because you’re paying for electricit­y without revenue coming in,” he said.

In Hayes Valley, Kim Alter has spent tens of thousands of dollars over the last year on security equipment for her restaurant, Nightbird. Around the Thanksgivi­ng holidays, she said, someone tried to break the lock on one of her doors to get inside of the building. She had the lock replaced. The next week, she said, someone removed a window on her restaurant to get inside. The following day, Alter paid more than $ 1,000 to get floodlight­ing installed.

“I don’t even think we’re at the worst we’re going to see it,” she said. “It makes me wonder if people are going to have keep their places boarded up even after we’re allowed to really open again.”

Restaurant owners, including Alter and Sittnick, said filing police reports rarely results in an arrest or stolen items being recovered. But the Police Department said it encourages individual­s to make reports when crimes occur.

“As a department, we are constantly evaluating all crime trends and different ways to combat those trends throughout the city. This includes the redeployme­nt of resources and increased patrols, foot beats and officers on fixed post in crime hot spots. This not only allows us to rapidly respond to crimes in progress but also act as a visual deterrent to wouldbe criminals,” said police spokesman Sgt. Michael Andraychak.

Restaurant­s have noticed an increase in vandalism and burglary since the beginning of the pandemic, right after the Bay Area shelterinp­lace orders called for people to stay home, and restaurant­s turned to takeout and delivery service only.

Azalina Eusope, the owner of Mahila, a Malaysian restaurant in San Francisco’s Noe Valley, said she was mugged outside of her restaurant just before the start of the pandemic in February. Then in June, Eusope posted on Instagram that someone broke into her business and stole a laptop, iPads, two handheld pointofsal­e systems and a small restaurant safe, among other items. Overall, she said, the losses, including the work to repair damaged windows, totaled around $ 10,000.

“You see this happening at so many restaurant­s over the last couple of months, people having things stolen or someone breaking into the building,” she said. “It’s at a point now where you kind of feel helpless, like whatever else is going to happen is just going to happen.”

Mark Bechelli, who owns the 32yearold San Francisco restaurant Bechelli’s Flower Market Cafe, has had several instances of vandalism and breakins throughout the pandemic. A few weeks ago, he said, someone got onto the restaurant property and used a 20foot ladder to remove one of his outdoor speakers. Replacing damaged property like the speakers, as well as cleaning the building of graffiti, and putting dozens of pieces of

“You see this happening at so many restaurant­s. ... People having things stolen or someone breaking into the building.” Kim Alter, owner of Nightbird restaurant in Hayes Valley

plywood over his windows, has cost thousands of dollars, he said.

At times, Bechelli said, he thinks that if he had a clean financial slate right now instead of the mounting rent payments and operating costs, he “would just walk away.”

Restaurant­s in San Francisco have lobbied for federal financial aid that could help deal with property crime. The Paycheck Protection Program, which issued semiforgiv­eable loans for small businesses under the Cares Act last year, was a small boon. The recent $ 900 billion COVID relief package includes a boost to unemployme­nt checks, but it does not include the industry relief promised by the Restaurant­s Act, which was proposed in June to provide $ 120 billion in grants to restaurant­s.

Even while financial help seems far away and crime continues to be an problem, many local business owners say the situation is a reminder of hardships that everyone in the Bay Area is facing, not just restaurant­s.

Sittnick said the hardest part of running a business in the city these days is having to cut staff at various times, especially during the holidays.

“It just kind of sucks for everybody right now,” he said. “That’s really the only way to say it.”

 ?? Nick Otto / Special to The Chronicle 2020 ?? Kim Alter, chefowner of San Francisco restaurant Nightbird, has spent tens of thousands of dollars on security equipment.
Nick Otto / Special to The Chronicle 2020 Kim Alter, chefowner of San Francisco restaurant Nightbird, has spent tens of thousands of dollars on security equipment.

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