Antelope Valley Press

Santa Monica pub tries to carry on with virus rules

- By BRIAN MELLEY Associated Press

SANTA MONICA — By most measures of what keeps a pub afloat, the Coronaviru­s pandemic should already have Ye Olde King’s Head on its last kegs.

The British restaurant and bar in seaside Southern California has been battered the past nine months. It was in the process of adapting to new restrictio­ns that took effect Friday that would further crimp its recovery even as the prospect of a stay-home order loomed that could cripple the business.

“It’s not worth thinking about,” said operations manager Lisa Powers, who has guided the 46-year-old institutio­n through an ever-changing set of public health orders. “Nobody’s going to survive without help from the federal government if there’s another lockdown.”

The surge of cases in Los Angeles County is exploding at a rate even local public health officials didn’t seem to contemplat­e on Tuesday, when they gave businesses three days to adopt new restrictio­ns that force restaurant­s to halve the outdoor capacity many establishe­d to stay afloat because indoor service was banned. Restaurant­s and nonessenti­al retail must close at 10 p.m.

On Wednesday, LA County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said that by early December the county of 10 million people could reach a daily average of 4,000 cases that would require restaurant­s to only offer takeout meals. She said she didn’t think that outcome was inevitable.

The next day, as daily cases topped 5,000, county health officer Dr. Muntu Davis said by Sunday the county could surpass a daily average of 4,500 cases that would

trigger a shutdown.

The latest surge comes as public health officials across the U.S. raise the alarm about out-of-control transmissi­on of the virus, strengthen restrictio­ns and urge people against holding large Thanksgivi­ng gatherings.

Gov. Gavin Newsom placed most California businesses under the most severe restrictio­ns on Monday and on Thursday added a 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew for residents that takes effect Saturday.

Restrictio­ns went further in Los Angeles County, which accounts for a quarter of the state’s 40 million residents but has about a third of the Coronaviru­s cases and close to 40% of the deaths.

Ye Olde King’s Head, a mock Tudor fixture near the beach in Santa Monica, weathered a lengthy shutdown in the spring, a destructiv­e ransacking during police protests in May and public health orders that have required constant adaptation.

“It’s like every week there’s a different rule to follow,” Powers said as she readied the establishm­ent for the latest rules that includes changing closing time from 2 a.m. to 10 p.m. “We’re trying to keep up but things happen so fast.”

The California Restaurant Associatio­n has said thousands of restaurant­s have closed statewide and it fears more than a third of restaurant­s open in March before the first shutdown order will eventually go

out of business.

The King’s Head had to offer its traditiona­l British fare — everything from bangers and mash and fish and chips to traditiona­l Sunday roast — for takeout. Its adjoining gift “shoppe” offering imported tea, biscuits, Marmite spread and British newspapers has also reopened.

It continued to rebuild after vandals and looters trashed the place during protests following the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. The ATM was dragged into the street, smashed open and the cash pocketed. Booze was stolen, television­s were smashed and graffiti was sprayed on the window blinds.

“They didn’t even know what they were looting,” Powers said. “It was English tea and English chocolates.”

When only outdoor dining was allowed, the King’s Head was fortunate to be a business that already had patio seating, allowing it to begin serving pints with pub grub along with formal afternoon tea on fine china and white linen with fresh baked scones, sausage rolls and mini sandwiches.

For the largely British ex-pat community, as well as loyal locals and tourists from all over, the reopening was welcome.

“It’s as close to being back home as you can get,” said Philip Mathur, who has been frequentin­g the pub since he moved to LA from a small town outside Glasgow more than 20 years ago. “It brings a bit of sanity into another otherwise strange world we’re living in right now.”

Mathur, who drank a Heineken and planned to order steak pie and chips once his three British friends arrived, said it would be “a sad loss” if the pub had to close again.

It should have been a big year for any bar in Los Angeles. The Dodgers won their first World Series in more than three decades and the Lakers won their first NBA Championsh­ip in 10 years. The pub also draws crowds for English soccer and rugby matches that they had to show to limited crowds on the patio.

The pub itself is mostly quiet. No one is throwing darts, standing at the dark wooden bar where 20 beers are on tap, eating in the formal dining room or sitting by the fireplace with a painting of Winston Churchill above it.

Powers is working on plans to add awnings and heaters to prepare for outdoor seating in the cooler, damper months in the otherwise temperate climate.

 ??  ??
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A server carries food for a customer Thursday at Ye Olde King’s Head in Santa Monica. The British restaurant and bar in seaside Southern California has been battered the past nine months and was in the process of adapting to new restrictio­ns that took effect Friday that would further crimp its recovery even as the prospect of a crippling shutdown loomed.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A server carries food for a customer Thursday at Ye Olde King’s Head in Santa Monica. The British restaurant and bar in seaside Southern California has been battered the past nine months and was in the process of adapting to new restrictio­ns that took effect Friday that would further crimp its recovery even as the prospect of a crippling shutdown loomed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States