Los Angeles Times

Long Beach cuts gas to noncomplia­nt restaurant

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

For weeks, owner has offered outdoor patio dining in defiance of pandemic rules.

For weeks, Dana Tanner has kept her Long Beach restaurant open for outdoor patio dining in defiance of pandemic safety regulation­s. She had two tables left to serve Saturday afternoon when city workers showed up, she said, and shut off her gas.

It’s the latest in a string of enforcemen­t efforts officials have lodged against Restaurati­on and Tanner personally in recent weeks, she said, including nine citations and misdemeano­r charges. Still,

Tanner refuses to close her doors. “I’ve seen the damage this does to people when they lose their livelihood,” she said. “I refuse to participat­e in that.”

So, she dusted off some stove tops and a countertop fryer in her storage, bought an electric water heater from Home Depot and worked with her chef to revise her menu. French fries and steak are off the table.

Pancakes take up too much space to make, she said, but she does have enough room for French toast.

Tanner reopened for brunch the next morning.

A representa­tive for the city could not be reached Sunday. Spokesman Kevin Lee told the Long Beach Post that the city took the step of turning off Restaurati­on’s gas after warning Tanner that it would do so if she stayed open against COVID-19 rules.

The harsh enforcemen­t efforts against Tanner’s restaurant come as L.A. County has recorded more than 5,000 COVID-19-related deaths in less than a month, a pace that highlights the rampant spread of the virus. The Department of Public Health’s official death toll stood at 15,162 Saturday after 269 deaths and 10,537 new cases of COVID-19 were confirmed. Overall, the county’s confirmed case total reached 1,064,887.

Tanner said none of her 13 employees have tested positive — and if they are potentiall­y exposed, she requires a negative test before they can return to work.

“I’m knocking on my head right now,” she said. “We’re super cautious.”

L.A. County officials shut down outdoor dining just before Thanksgivi­ng as coronaviru­s cases started to surge, a controvers­ial decision requiring restaurant­s and other eateries to stop inperson dining outdoors and instead provide only takeout and delivery. It was a major setback for many restaurant­s that were struggling to survive on takeout alone and others that had invested thousands of dollars into building patios.

Tanner said she closed for two weeks at the time.

She said she started to get “pummeled” by city officials this month. On Jan. 15, Tanner was charged with four misdemeano­r counts of refusing health orders, according to the L.A. County Superior Court’s online database. She said inspectors typically show up twice a day, taking pictures and issuing citations, and her landlord is facing pressure to evict her.

The city’s Code Enforcemen­t Bureau taped a notice on her door Friday saying her gas would be shut off within 24 hours, along with informatio­n about her right to appeal within five days.

“I’m pretty emotionall­y drained at this point,” she said. “I’m not breaking any laws.”

She said other restaurant owners have chosen to stay open but wishes more would do so. One, she said, is on her third citation. But Tanner, who opened Restaurati­on in 2014, said she knows of none who have faced as harsh penalties as she has.

The Long Beach Post reported that city officials have said they’ve taken such extreme enforcemen­t actions against Tanner because of her “continued flagrant violations” of the city’s health order.

L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti said last year that he would authorize the city to shut off water and power to residents who hold large parties. The Department of Water and Power said it cut utilities this month to a Fairfax district home where at least three parties were held in violation of the city’s ban on large gatherings.

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