The News-Times (Sunday)

Pandemic to transform the restaurant industry

- By Julia Perkins

Reduced capacity. Adapted menus. Employees wearing gloves and masks with their company’s logo.

Increased reliance on takeout and delivery.

Outdoor seating on patios or even streets and sidewalks.

These are among the ways dining could be transforme­d once restaurant­s reopen,said Scott Dolch, executive director of the Connecticu­t Restaurant Associatio­n.

His associatio­n is working closely with state and other officials to develop a plan and monitor successes and failures in other states.

“We are a creative industry,” Dolch said. “We have entreprene­urial spirit. We adapt.”

Restaurant­s may change menus, especially if foods like poultry are in short supply, and rely more on local farms and breweries, he said. Customers ordering takeout may want more family-style cooking, Dolch said.

Maggie McFly’s, a chain restaurant with five locations in Connecticu­t, expects takeout and delivery to drive business, owner Ray Harper said.

He anticipate­s being at 50 percent capacity when reopening, seating every other table or installing partitions between booths. Ordering food would be “as touchless as possible,” with mobile menus and pay, Harper said.

He would prioritize bringing back employees who may be immune to the virus, but some staff earn more on unemployme­nt and may be afraid to return.

“A slow start is going to be easier for me,” Harper said.

The pandemic has further heightened restaurant workers’ concerns over cleanlines­s, which should make the public feel safe, Harper said.

“They have the same fears a customer would,” he said. “They’re doing all the precaution­s.”

Still, 3 percent of the state’s 8,500 restaurant­s already permanentl­y closed and another 6 percent reported in a survey they would need to shutter if they cannot reopen around mid-May, Dolch said.

This could mean jobs lost for restaurant employees and others — from fishermen to accountant­s — who work with the industry, he said.

“Everyone is working together to find solutions to help every restaurant they can,” Dolch said. “Because they know the impact that it has if it doesn't get back on its feet, how it can hurt a community.”

 ?? H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Tom Stoehrer, a server at Maggie McFly's in Brookfield, brings a to-go order to a car on Thursday evening, April 23 in Brookfield.
H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Tom Stoehrer, a server at Maggie McFly's in Brookfield, brings a to-go order to a car on Thursday evening, April 23 in Brookfield.

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