The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Businesses battle new restrictions amid surge
Officials in some states have faced groundswell of opposition to rules.
Movie theaters in New York City are demanding the right to reopen. Restaurateurs in Massachusetts are trying to serve more customers at night. And top retailers are targeting store limits across the country, hoping to boost shopping — and profits — as the holidays approach.
Even as the coronavirus ravages the United States, a wide array of tourism, hospitality, restaurant and retail groups have fought to preserve their ability to operate anyway, seeking to stave off shutdowns and some other restrictions that public health experts see as essential for bringing the nation’s deadly contagion under control.
This spring, many of these industries took a dramatic financial hit after states imposed broad stay-at-home orders to arrest the spread of the coronavirus pandemic.
The abrupt halt to economic activity saved countless lives, even as it thrust tens of millions out of work and closed some businesses for good.
States relaxed some of their restrictions this summer, but the swift resurgence of the coronavirus in the fall — as record caseloads now threaten to overwhelm hospitals — has forced some governors and legislators to rethink their approach. In some instances, state officials have faced a groundswell of opposition as businesses aim to rile residents, relax state rules or hold new ones at bay.
In New York, for example, a trade association representing movie theaters has urged Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, to allow the industry to reopen even as cases continue to climb. The Global Cinema Federation asserted in a letter to Cuomo last month that there are “no covid-19 cases linked to movie theaters anywhere in the world.”
Cuomo ultimately offered the industry a break and allowed theaters outside of New York City to reopen at 25% capacity. However, he has kept screens dark in the city’s five boroughs as infections there tick higher. Undeterred, the National Association of Theatre Owners, another industry trade group, intensified its campaign in November. Its New York chapter pleaded with the governor to reopen city theaters in time for the next Wonder Woman film, stressing that Cuomo could still “save the one big Christmas movie” left on the calendar, said Joe Masher, the organization’s chief operating officer.
“It’s had total devastation on our industry,” Masher said.
The lobbying barrage arrives as epidemiologists continue to sound the alarms about the country’s latest, and perhaps deadliest, coronavirus surge since March. Shattering records, the U.S. daily caseload topped 177,000 new cases Nov. 13, with spikes in Midwestern states where Republican governors have eschewed mask mandates and other new restrictions.
“The concern about exceeding health-care capacity is real,” said David Rubin, the director of PolicyLab at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
In recent days, public-health officials — including those advising President-elect Joe Biden — have signaled the need for new, targeted closures to stop the spread of the coronavirus in places where infections are running high. Virginia on Nov. 13 joined a growing roster of states instituting a slew of new rules, including limits on indoor gatherings and an earlier cutoff on alcohol sales at night.
States including Illinois and Rhode Island, meanwhile, have warned about more drastic measures on the horizons, including stay-home orders that mirror some of the aggressive mandates they imposed earlier this spring. Illinois in particular reported more than 15,000 new coronavirus cases Nov. 13 and a seven-day test positivity rate exceeding 14%, prompting Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker and state health authorities to beg the public to take heed.
“If things don’t take a turn in the coming days,” Pritzker warned Nov. 12, “we will quickly reach the point when some form of a mandatory stay-at-home order is all that will be left.”
But Pritzker and other governors have clashed at times with local business leaders who say another round of closures could cause lasting economic harm. The Illinois Restaurant Association, for example, mobilized Nov. 11 in response to the governor’s recent rule barring all indoor dining. The group took to social media to try to drum up public support against the order, which its president, Sam Toia, said would leave thousands of workers unemployed.
“If it’s that bad, why are we the only industry being closed down? We know how to do this right,” said Toia, who stressed indoor dining is safe.
A coalition of bar owners in Pennsylvania similarly has lobbied for more indoor dining and drinking. The industry aims to override Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, who recently vetoed a hospitality-backed measure that would have loosened local restrictions. And Massachusetts’ restaurant lobbyists have targeted Republican Gov. Charlie Baker’s curfew requiring restaurants to stop serving at 9:30 p.m. Bob Luz, the leader of the Massachusetts Restaurant Association, said thousands of area establishments want the governor to extend the hours given that few confirmed COVID19 cases can be traced back to public dining.
“They can’t afford to bleed even a little at this point,” Luz said. “The last thing a restaurateur wants is to put employees back on furlough.”
Restaurateurs, bar owners and other hospitality businesses have been some of the hardest hit in a pandemic that has turned social proximity into a deadly risk. More than 2.1 million workers in the industry were unemployed in October, according to the federal labor data. But the economic hardship wrought by the coronavirus has been far more widespread, prompting hospitality leaders to join a full array of industries calling on Washington to authorize additional stimulus aid — largely to no avail.
On Capitol Hill, Democrat-led efforts to authorize trillions of dollars in fresh stimulus spending have instead met fierce opposition from Republicans, who balk at the price tag and point to recent improvements in the economy.
Since the election, the two parties have grown further apart on a successor to the $2 trillion CARES Act, even as many of its programs meant to help workers and businesses have run out of funding or expired. President Donald Trump, meanwhile, called on Congress in a tweet Nov. 14 to “do a Covid Relief Bill,” saying Democrats need to support the measure — even though party leaders in the House adopted a bill months ago.