Chicago Sun-Times

Mayor urged to give restaurant­s a lifeline

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Mayor Lori Lightfoot was urged Thursday to throw a financial lifeline to Chicago restaurant­s fighting for survival after the one-two punch of rioting and the stay-athome shutdown.

Ald. Ray Lopez (15th), the mayor’s most outspoken City Council critic, wants the city to grant a free, 60-day sidewalk café permit to “any restaurant or bar” meeting the city’s requiremen­ts for a sidewalk café.

The alderman said he was joined by the Back of the Yards Neighborho­od Council and 25 “family-owned restaurant­s and bars” in Brighton Park, Back of the Yards and Little Village.

“We need to be bold in our efforts in helping our local businesses in every neighborho­od in Chicago,” Lopez was quoted as saying in a press release.

“We have the tools now to allow, within the context of the law, the ability to issue legitimate permits. Lightfoot has the emergency authority to defer fee collection­s.”

Illinois Restaurant Associatio­n President Sam Toia said the request from Lopez doesn’t go nearly far enough.

Toia wants the city to waive its 0.5% restaurant tax for the rest of the year and grant free sidewalk café permits good for six months. The sidewalk café permit waiver alone could save restaurant­s $500 to “a few thousand” dollars for a restaurant with “a lot of sidewalk space” in the Central Business District.

“The restaurant community here in the city of Chicago has been hemorrhagi­ng.

There are 7,500 restaurant­s here in Chicago. Half of ’em are not even open right now. The other half that are open are doing curbside pick-up, delivery and carry-out — [and] are doing 20-to-30 percent of the business they were doing a year ago,” Toia said.

“No restaurant­s model out there could sustain itself going 10, 11 weeks with no sales or only 20 to 30 percent of the sales they were doing the previous years.”

This week, Chicago restaurant­s were authorized to open for outdoor dining.

Some took advantage of it. Others didn’t, some because they were vandalized and looted, others because they were afraid that ongoing demonstrat­ions protesting the death of George Floyd might turn violent.

Lightfoot has urged Gov. J.B. Pritzker to allow Chicago restaurant­s to have at least some indoor dining in June.

The mayor has also agreed to close six of Chicago’s most popular restaurant corridors to traffic to give restaurant­s more space and revenue from outdoor dining.

But the plan has not taken effect in those corridors, which are in Chatham, Lake View, Little Village, the Gold Coast, the Near West Side and the West Loop. Local chambers of commerce are still working with the city and local restaurant­s to secure permits and establish operating hours that may differ from neighborho­od to neighborho­od.

Toia said he still hopes at least some of the street dining districts could be open this weekend, particular­ly in the Rush Street area, to take advantage of weekend weather expected to be beautiful.

 ?? CHICAGO PHOTO VIA TWITTER ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot visited commercial areas on the South and West sides on Monday. Here, she meets with residents near Brown Sugar Bakery, 328 E. 75th St. CITY OF
CHICAGO PHOTO VIA TWITTER Mayor Lori Lightfoot visited commercial areas on the South and West sides on Monday. Here, she meets with residents near Brown Sugar Bakery, 328 E. 75th St. CITY OF

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