Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Greek cafes are still being shuttered by COVID-19 measures

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>> Silence has replaced the low hum of conversati­on and the clink of glasses that pervaded the sidewalk cafes across Athens. Their chairs and tables, once occupied throughout the day and deep into the night, stand stacked in empty piles, some secured by chains.

When coronaviru­s infections rose again in Greece in the fall, the government imposed a second lockdown. Retail stores, bars, restaurant­s and cafes found themselves shuttered once more, forced to close their doors in early November to prevent the virus’s insidious spread.

Retail stores opened briefly during the Christmas holidays, with social distancing measures in place, and starting Monday will be allowed to reopen to customers on an appointmen­t basis. But the restaurant­s, bars and cafes, which by nature gather groups of people closely together, will enter their sixth month of being shut except for take away or delivery service..

While state subsidies such as rent coverage, loans, tax reductions and paid employee furlough schemes are available, the formula hasn’t worked for all business owners.

Vassilis Panteris, coowner of an all-day bar that provides coffee, food and drinks in a central Athens neighborho­od, shut down at the start of Greece’s second lockdown on Nov. 7 and hasn’t opened since.

The main reason, he said, was the partners feared they wouldn’t be able to make enough money from deliveries to cover operation costs, even with fewer staff members. They also worried that some customers coming by for takeaway coffee, food or drinks wouldn’t adhere to social distancing and other government regulation­s, exposing the café to hefty fines.

Panteris said the business has lost about 30,000 euros ($35,000) since the start of the pandemic. Business owners hope for more substantia­l government support to retain employees and keep their establishm­ents alive. Greece sank back into recession last year due to the pandemic and accompanyi­ng lockdown measures.

“It’s hard to make prediction­s about the course of the business in the middle of such an unstable environmen­t,” Panteris said.

Since the start of the pandemic, Greece has reported more than 263,000 confirmed coronaviru­s cases and more than 8,000 virusrelat­ed deaths. The country of around 11 million people so far has administer­ed 1.7 million vaccine doses, with over 600,000 people fully vaccinated with two shots.

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