The Morning Call

Bar owners hope to win veto showdown

- By Ford Turner

HARRISBURG— Joe’s Tavern owner Shelly Salak hopes lawmakers win the next anticipate­d coronaviru­s political battle with the governor in Harrisburg, so she can get a break from personal and economic grief.

Her father Russell, who ran the bar in Bethlehem for decades, died of cancer on the March day Gov. TomWolf’s coronaviru­s business shutdown went into effect.

It hasn’t been open a single day since then.

But now-owner Shelly Salak sees real hope in an anticipate­d upcoming vote battle between Wolf and lawmakers. It focuses on a bill that would loosen some virus-safety restrictio­ns on bars and restaurant­s, including allowing the use of bar seats during the pandemic.

That would make a huge difference for Joe’s.

“It is a make-or-break bill, for us to reopen,” said Salak, whose grandfathe­r founded the corner bar 60 years ago. “Without the ability to have bar seating, we can’t open.”

Signs point to a behind-the-scenes fight over the bill. Wolf vetoed a different bill on Monday that would have given school districts the final say in running sports events during the pandemic.

Although the House had originally passed it with 155 votes far more than the 135 necessary to override a veto when it came time to vote against Wolf, 24 of his fellow Democrats in the Republican-dominated House changed their positions.

The override failed.

Republican­s had harsh words for the “flippers,” but several of those who changed positions spoke publicly about their reasons.

The upcoming Legislatur­e-approved bill also would let restaurant­s immediatel­y operate at 50% capacity with social distancing and mask wearing.

It was passed by the Legislatur­e earlier this week. The final tallies of “yes” votes were 145 in the House and 43 in the Senate.

AWolf spokeswoma­n already has said he will veto the bill.

“It is going to come down to the lobbying pressure that the governor is going to put on certain Democrats to see if they will flip,” Chuck Moran, executive director of the Pennsylvan­ia Licensed Beverage and Tavern Associatio­n.

John Longstreet, Pennsylvan­ia

▪ The state reported 806 new cases of the coronaviru­s, bringing the total to 154,203. There were two deaths for a total of 8,081.

▪ Lehigh County had 17 new cases, Northampto­n County had 14. There were no new deaths.

Restaurant & Lodging Associatio­n president and CEO, said he thinks more lawmakers will stick with the bill this

time than did last time.

The school-sports bill, Longstreet said, had new standards that included local options. The restaurant-bar reopening bill, he said, simply goes back to earlier standards by returning those businesses in Pennsylvan­ia to where they were before Wolf’s July 15 order.

That order hit restaurant­s with a 25% indoor capacity limit.

The administra­tion, he said, has never demonstrat­ed that 50% capacity with social distancing and other safety measures is less safe than 25% capacity.

If it comes to a veto override, Longstreet said, “I think there is a real possibilit­y that folks on both sides of the aisle will continue to stand with restaurant­s.”

Wolf spokespers­on Lyndsay Kensinger said the state’s aggressive mitigation has kept virus case counts low, and nearly every state has put restrictio­ns on bars and restaurant­s.

Those restrictio­ns, she said, are rooted in science. She cited a recent CDCcase study that found adults with positive COVID-19 test results were approximat­ely twice as likely to have reported dining at a restaurant than were those with negative COVID-19 test results.

And, she noted, the administra­tion already has allowed restaurant­s to return to 50% capacity if they self-certify they are following safety protocols.

Kensinger reiterated Wolf’s statements from earlier in the week that lawmakers should work on funding for child care and hazard pay for front-line workers and getting sick leave for Pennsylvan­ians, among other things.

There is evidence of how dire the Pennsylvan­ia situation is, according to Longstreet.

Data from a national survey that included PRLAshowed that if present business climate does not change, 63% of Pennsylvan­ia restaurant­s expect to be permanentl­y closed in six months. The broader group of U.S. responses puts the national figure at 38%, according to Longstreet.

The far-more-negative outlook in Pennsylvan­ia, Longstreet said, has to be due to Wolf’s “draconian mitigation measures.”

Joe’s Tavern closed March 17 in the initial pandemic business shutdown. It has stayed closed in part because of the no-bar-seat issue, Salak said.

Her father, who was 81, died

March 17.

She said running the place was the only job he ever had after he left the U.S. Air Force in 1960. The atmosphere he and his father before him created, she said, was a neighborho­od corner nook where people went to talk and socialize.

Right now, she said, its immediate future depends on what happens in Harrisburg.

Virus update

Meanwhile, the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health on Friday reported 806 more cases of the coronaviru­s to bring the total to 154,203. The newly reported cases include 17 in Lehigh County and 14 in Northampto­n County.

The totals are 5,568 cases in Lehigh and 4,457 cases in Northampto­n.

The state also reports two more deaths to make the total 8,081.

There are 435 people hospitaliz­ed for the virus Friday afternoon. That statistic has trended generally lower for months.

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