Pandemic limits on alcohol, indoor dining fuel a restaurant rebellion
PITTSBURGH: Since 1959, Al’s Cafe has been known for cold beer, hearty hoagies and the occasional coconut shrimp pla er.
But since the coronavirus outbreak, the Bethel Park eatery has become the staging ground for an unlikely anti-government rebellion.
First came complaints that owner Rod Ambrogi and his patrons were failing to abide by a statewide mask mandate imposed in July by Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf, a Democrat.
Ambrogi has since put on a mask, but he refuses to prevent customers from bellying up to the bar in defiance of state rules strictly limiting indoor dining.
“I can see (wearing) the mask now. But the rest of it is stupid,” said Ambrogi, 74, who has rallied local tavern owners to defy the rules.
“There are people going out of business every day around here.”
Six months into the coronavirus pandemic, restrictions on dining have le restaurants and taverns across the nation struggling to stay afloat.
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has blamed President Donald Trump for a bungled pandemic response that has le at least 190,000 dead and millions unemployed.
But in Pennsylvania, a crucial swing state Trump carried by just 44,000 votes in 2016, a debate is raging over whether the Republicans in Washington or the Democrats in Harrisburg bear more responsibility for the industry’s economic pain.
Nationally, jobs in food service and drinking places fell 49 per cent from February to April, according to Gus Faucher, chief economist for Pi sburgh’s PNC Financial Services Group.
In Pennsylvania, the job loss was steeper, at 59 per cent.
And in the Pi sburgh metropolitan statistical area, which includes seven counties in the state’s southwest corner, those jobs plummeted by 62 per cent.
While some have bounced back, July figures show that Pennsylvania bars and restaurants are still hurting. In Pi sburgh, only about a third of lost food and drink jobs have returned, leaving about 33,000 people still unemployed.
“Who are those 33,000 people out of work?” Faucher said.
“And who are they going to hold responsible?”
For some, the answer is the governor.
A er closing restaurants and bars along with other nonessential businesses when the pandemic struck in midMarch, Wolf began permi ing them to reopen this spring.
But when the number of new infections began rising, the state health commissioner cranked up restrictions on indoor dining, a key vector of infection.
Under the new rules, alcohol could be sold only if customers also ordered food. Sidling up to a bar for a brew was forbidden.
Most infuriating to owners: Eateries that had been preparing to reopen at 50 per cent capacity were suddenly told they would have to operate at 25 per cent capacity.
Pennsylvania is one of just three states to impose such severe limits, according to a database compiled by the National Restaurant Association, though some local jurisdictions have done so.
Many bar and restaurant owners say the state is denying them the right to earn a living.
Rui Lucas, 45, who owns three restaurants in suburban Philadelphia, formed a trade association this summer to push for counties, rather than the state, to set coronavirus standards for bars and restaurants.
“Of course, we’re all scared. On many levels,” Lucas said.
“We know we are at the fate of the virus. But we are also at the fate of Governor Wolf.”
State health officials defend the decision to keep a tight rein on bars and restaurants, saying it is based on data, including information from people who tested positive a er dining out.
The number of new cases has fallen, and White House coronavirus response coordinator Deborah Birx praised the state earlier this month, saying only five others have a lower case count.
Still, Sarah Boateng, executive deputy secretary at the Pennsylvania Department of Health, said she understands the blowback.
“I hear the frustration of the restaurant owners. I appreciate it,” she said.
“We know it’s not been easy.”
In general, state residents give Wolf good marks for his handling of the crisis.
According to an August Monmouth University poll, 62 per cent of Pennsylvania voters said the governor has done a good job, while more than half the state’s voters – 53 per cent – said they disapproved of Trump’s handling of the virus.
But approval for Wolf’s performance slipped from 67 per cent in July.
And the same survey showed Biden leading Trump by just four points – 49 per cent to 45 per cent – down from a 13-point advantage a month earlier.
Lara Putnam, a history professor at the University of Pi sburgh who monitors political activity on Facebook and other social media sites, said she sees ‘an intensity of agitation online, especially farther outside of metropolitan areas, to blame Tom Wolf’ for the grim economic situation.
The state’s overall unemployment rate was 13.7 per cent in July, the most recent available, significantly above the national July average of 10.2 per cent.
“If you’re a waitress who has lost all your hours,” Putnam said, “who are you going to blame?”
Ambrogi, who so far has called back only 40 of 60 employees at Al’s Cafe, knows precisely whom he blames.
He blasts Wolf’s restrictions on dining as ‘unconstitutional’.
“Look, I know it’s a bad virus. And no one wants to see anyone get sick,” Ambrogi said.
“But it comes to a point: The general public has had enough of this.”
On Tuesday, with new infections down, Wolf granted restaurateurs a reprieve: Starting Sept 21, they can operate at 50 per cent capacity. But they will also have to stop serving alcohol at 10 pm, an hour earlier.
“We wanted a ham and he gave us a hot dog,” complained Ambrogi, a stalwart Trump supporter. Of the new time for last call, he said, “I don’t know what that will mean” for business.
Since leading a local revolt against the restrictions, Ambrogi has corresponded with restaurant owners across the state.
He said he has also wri en to Wolf and reached out to state lawmakers from both parties.
Only Republicans responded, he said.
“Where are the Democrats? Are they waiting to make Trump look bad?” said Phil Catagnus, one of Ambrogi’s brothers in arms and the owner of the Double Visions go-go bar outside Philadelphia.
“We are the people stuck in the middle of this.”
Because people can no longer drink without ordering food, Catagnus, 64, joked that he now sells “virus-killing hot dogs.”
Still, the restrictions on indoor dining are killing business, he said.
“I’m very grateful for being open. But the margins are so small,” said Catagnus, who plans to vote for Biden despite feeling neglected by Democrats in Harrisburg.
Meredith Meyer Grelli grew up in Pi sburgh’s North Hills, teaches entrepreneurship at Carnegie Mellon University and runs Wigle Whiskey, the first distillery in Pi sburgh since Prohibition.
Before the pandemic, nearly 150 customers showed up for Saturday tours. These days, Grelli relies heavily on bo le sales to stay afloat.
“What’s frustrating for bars and restaurants is they have been singled out, but there has been no effort to provide specific support,” said Grelli, 35.
“We are fortunate that we have bo le sales. But this capacity issue? No one builds a business to operate at 25 per cent or 50 per cent.”
Grelli said that she doesn’t blame the state for her problems but that she understands why many bar owners are angry.
The distillery “gave up on profitability a long time ago,” she said.
“We are bleeding money like anyone else.”
Lawyer-cum-brewer Peter Kurzweg co-owns the Independent Brewing Company and two other cra beer halls in Pi sburgh.
He used to pack 120 people into his hipster beer room in the city’s Squirrel Hill neighbourhood on Friday nights. Today, he has no indoor seating because he thinks ventilation is key to controlling the virus.
Kurzweg, too, is unhappy with the statewide restrictions.
“I have lost count of the number of good restaurants that have closed,” he said.
But Kurzweg, 38, said he places greater blame on Trump.
While countries like Germany kept the virus at bay and largely have returned to normal life, he said, the White House failed to gain control of the outbreak, allowing it to become a national calamity.
“I have mixed feelings about what the state did. They needed to find a happy balance,” Kurzweg said.
But “fundamentally, I a ribute what we have now to a lack of a strong federal response and strong federal guidance.” — The Washington Post
I can see (wearing) the mask now. But the rest of it is stupid. There are people going out of business every day around here.
Rod Ambrogi