Santa Fe New Mexican

Family: After restuarant bans children under 5, business booms.

- By Peter Holley COURTESY PHOTO

The final straw was a little girl using an iPad with the volume on high, a device her parents refused to turn down despite repeated requests from the staff at Caruso’s, an upscale Italian restaurant in Mooresvill­e, N.C. Yoshi Nunez, the restaurant’s manager, had encountere­d unruly kids in his restaurant before; but this time, he said, the parents were misbehavin­g, too.

“Finally, we had to ask them to leave,” Nunez told The Washington Post. “They were upset, but they didn’t seem to care about what the other guests thought. We tried to be nice about the situation, but we’re here to take care of customers, and we can’t tell a parent how to control their kids.

“That was the incident that triggered the entire thing.”

“The entire thing,” as Nunez puts it, is the restaurant’s strict ban on children under the age of 5. It went into effect in January, drawing passionate applause from some diners online and angry condemnati­on from others.

The ban — conceived by the restaurant’s owner, Pasquale Caruso — has led to a dramatic increase in reservatio­ns, said Nunez, who said Caruso’s has seen a spike in diners, from about 50 per day to around 80.

“Banning children has always been a topic in the industry, and every owner says, ‘I wish I could do it,’ ” Nunez said. “Our owner has the full support of the staff. We work here to make a living, too, and we support our owner 100 percent.”

It’s hard to say whether child bans are officially a restaurant industry trend, but they’re no longer particular­ly unusual. Caruso’s — which describes itself as “traditiona­l, classy, intimate” on its website — is the latest in a series of eateries to ban children or introduce measures to control them.

In recent years, restaurant­s in Korea, Italy, Australia, Texas, Pennsylvan­ia and California have either banned young children outright or introduced measures to control their behavior, according to Eater.

As The Washington Post’s Amy Joyce wrote in 2013, the trend has even hit a Virginia neighborho­od “sometimes known for stroller traffic jams.”

The Northern Virginia neighborho­od, she wrote, “is experienci­ng a different kind of mommy war” with the arrival of a Japanese restaurant “for people 18 and older. Only. No kids. No strollers. Just adults enjoying sushi and sake in a lounge-type setting.”

“We thought parents just needed a place to give it a break, like an adult clubhouse,” Sushi Bar owner Mike Anderson told her.

In Houston, Cuchara, an intimate Mexican restaurant full of delicate artwork, began handing out cards with behavioral instructio­ns to customers with children in 2015, according to CBS affiliate KHOU. The etiquette training was introduced after a child scratched the restaurant walls with a quarter, causing $1,500 in damage.

“How do we stop that kind of thing?” Cuchara’s owner, Ana Beaven, told the station. “We’re busy serving and cleaning and moving around and we cannot babysit a child.” Do the etiquette cards annoy parents? “It doesn’t offend anyone, it’s a set of rules,” Beaven added.

The debate surroundin­g the bans invokes larger questions about sociology, class and parenting trends, with some researcher­s saying they are the natural result of a culture of overtaxed parents desperate to spend as much time as possible with their children, even if that one-on-one time occurs over a fine bottle of wine at the expense of other diners around them.

The North Carolina Restaurant and Lodging Associatio­n declined to comment on restaurant­s that ban children.

Sarah Dolan, director of media relations for the National Restaurant Associatio­n, said her group has “seen no evidence that this is a trend.”

“Every restaurant is different, and it’s up to each operator to make decisions that are best for their business and their guests,” Dolan said. “There are more than 1 million restaurant­s in the United States and the majority of them welcome families with children.”

On Caruso’s Facebook page, some parents criticized the child ban using sarcasm.

“A family of five requires a lot more attention from the wait staff ... and you as an owner can’t possibly want too many big parties, big checks and big tips coming in,” one woman wrote.

“Next you will be kicking out all the elderly because they take to long to eat,” another wrote. “Slippery slope!”

But the pushback from parents online was overwhelme­d by an outpouring of support for the restaurant’s ban, which was endorsed with language reserved for civil rights struggles.

“Thank you for taking a stand,” multiple people wrote.

Others said they applauded the restaurant’s “courage” and called the policy “brilliant.”

People from across the country promised to visit the restaurant, which is about 30 miles north of Charlotte, and one particular­ly animated fan suggested Caruso’s policy should be turned into state law.

A message on Caruso’s website says the establishm­ent requires “proper attire” and has “no children’s menu available.” Nunez said customers find out children aren’t allowed when they call to make a reservatio­n or, increasing­ly, via word of mouth.

The restaurant’s owner told the Mooresvill­e Tribune that he has nothing against children and noted that he’s a father of two himself. He said he is trying to create an atmosphere that keeps his restaurant “elegant” for couples and friends who want to have a relaxed evening out.

The ban wasn’t based on a single incident, Caruso said, but came about after he started “to lose money and customers, because I had very young children coming in, throwing food, running around and screaming.”

“I had several customers complain, get up and leave because children were bothering them, and the parents were doing nothing,” he told the Tribune. “It started to feel like it wasn’t Caruso’s anymore, that it was a local pizzeria instead.”

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 ??  ?? Caruso’s, an Italian restaurant in Mooresvill­e, N.C., saw a surge in reservatio­ns after it decided to ban children under 5 earlier this year.
Caruso’s, an Italian restaurant in Mooresvill­e, N.C., saw a surge in reservatio­ns after it decided to ban children under 5 earlier this year.
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NEW MEXICAN PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON

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