The Phoenix

Pa. needs to be business-friendly instead of anti-business

- By State Sen. Doug Mastriano Guest columnist Sen. Doug Mastriano is a Republican who represents the 33rd District in the Pennsylvan­ia Senate.

A restaurant from Ohio recently awarded Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf with its “employee of the month award.”

The recognitio­n was tonguein-cheek, but the honor was very deserving.

After all, Pennsylvan­ians residing near the Ohio border have been flocking to the Buckeye State to enjoy restaurant­s, as well as food and beverage establishm­ents, that are either shuttered here or operating at limited capacity.

As part of his unilateral, autocratic mandates, Gov. Wolf shut down all businesses he considered to be non-life-sustaining back in March, coinciding with the COVID-19 pandemic.

(No one knows for sure what criteria, if any, was used to determine what the Governor deemed as “life-sustaining” because the governor has refused to comply with a subpoena seeking that informatio­n).

Unfortunat­ely, restaurant­s were adversely impacted during the shutdown and only permitted to offer take-out. Many restaurant­s were unable to survive on that business model, and closed their doors… some, sadly, for good.

Meanwhile, large box stores and supermarke­ts were allowed to operate at full capacity. If we can observe social distancing, sanitation and other state and federally recognized health and safety practices at Wal-Mart and Home Depot, why can’t we do the same at mom-and-pop businesses?

As we approached early June, the governor slowly lifted the flawed color-coded model that he placed upon counties and allowed restaurant­s to reopen.

Initially, the restrictio­ns were few. But subsequent­ly, the governor decided more government overreach was needed and quickly imposed a 25-percent capacity limitation upon restaurant­s.

Bars, if they do not have food, were not allowed to reopen.

Some restaurant­s simply cannot operate at 25-percent capacity.

But it got worse. Surprising­ly, the governor — along with his failed Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine — defined what did and what did not constitute a meal. Since when did we need the government telling us what we are allowed to eat and drink?

The government overreach needs to stop.

Throughout the 2019-2020 legislativ­e session, the committee that I chair — the Senate Intergover­nmental Operations panel — has passed eight measures that reduce government bureaucrac­y, streamline regulation­s and cut red tape.

But for many businesses, it is already too late.

The restaurant­s that remain open are struggling to survive. Many have already closed their doors because they were unable to cope with the governor’s draconian edicts.

As a member of the General Assembly, I recently called upon Gov. Wolf to provide a specific reopening plan that will allow restaurant­s, as well as food and beverage establishm­ents, to operate at full capacity.

Instead of helping our businesses recover from the irreparabl­e damage they’ve incurred, the Wolf administra­tion is sending inspectors around to make sure restaurant­s are complying with social distancing, masks and other pandemic protocols.

There is no specific law detailing any of these practices, but that does not matter to the governor.

The governor and his administra­tion no longer trust state businesses to practice health and safety guidelines.

Instead of being businessfr­iendly, Wolf enjoys being a fear-mongerer.

How are restaurant­s supposed to operate at 25 percent capacity? What is the next step of Wolf’s so-called plan, and when will those steps occur?

Restaurant­s cannot continue to operate in this manner. Business owners deserve answers from the Wolf administra­tion.

It is time for leadership, not inaction ambiguity and indecisive­ness.

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Mastriano

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