Restaurant owners around the Okanagan have been left frustrated and emotional after new COVID-19 restrictions shut down their indoor dining.
For some, itѻýs time to dust off their patios. For others without outdoor dining spaces or takeout options, the next three weeks will be challenging.
On Monday (March 29), provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry announced new restrictions affecting restaurants, gyms and religious groups. The province has halted indoor dining and liquor sales, indoor adult group fitness and indoor religious services until April 19. Patio dining and takeout, however, are still allowed.
Premier John Horgan said Monday that case counts have been ѻýunacceptably highѻý in the past 10 days, and it is particularly people aged 20 to 39. Over last weekend, 2,500 new cases were recorded.
Meanwhile, Central Okanagan restaurant owners are speaking out.
ѻýThe second photo is what it looks like to be a business owner during COVID,ѻý said Rustic Reel owner Susi Foerg, in a post on Instagram showing a photo with tears on her face.
Referencing her 20-plus staff at the Kelowna brewery and restaurant, Foerg said each of their livelihoods rests on her shoulders. The new restrictions will come with reduced revenue and reduced hours, and a fridge full of food will now likely go bad due to just 12 hours of notice given to them by the province. This, she said, will affect not only restaurants but their suppliers as well.
ѻýWe were so close to being able to get back to regular rent. This sets us back again, and it hurts me terribly.ѻý
On Monday, Kelowna pub Doc Willoughbyѻýs received a $2,700 food shipment, most of which will likely go to waste. Their patio seats just a few, and takeout isnѻýt really an option. Owner Dave Willoughby called the lack of notice, ѻýdisrespectful.ѻý
ѻýItѻýs just kind of disrespectful. Itѻýs myopic and itѻýs my opinion they just donѻýt seem to understand that we need a little bit more time to kind of get our head wrapped around it and for people to make plans,ѻý said Willoughby.
He asked the government not only for specificity regarding funding relief for the restaurant industry, but also asked them to not paint the entire province with the same brush; to consider regional restrictions where they are needed.
On the other side of the lake in West Kelowna, at 19 Okanagan Grill and Bar, frustrations are echoed.
Owner Neil Martens said the B.C. governmentѻýs ѻýdays of collaborationѻý with restaurants are over. While he does not envy the tough decisions the government is making, Martens said they do not include people enough in solutions.
ѻýItѻýs a big public perception battle, and right now, they just need to be perceived as doing something, and so theyѻýre taking the path of least resistance to go after restaurants, gyms and places of worship.
However, Martens is in a better spot than most, with one of the largest patios in the Okanagan. Between their partially-closed patio and open patio, they could seat 270, pre-covid. Provincial health orders now mandate that patios must only be filled to half-capacity or 50 people total, whichever is lower.
Even then, Martens is unsure whether patrons will fill those available seats. His staff will likely face reduced hours due to reduced shifts and fewer tables to fill.
He said the government has eroded the trust they have gained from their customers as being a safe place to go.
ѻýThe biggest challenges weѻýre going to be faced with is, restaurants are painted with a brush of being the root of all evil when it comes to spreading, and that is simply the furthest thing from the truth.
ѻýIѻým not concerned about having seating for people; Iѻým just worried about peopleѻýs perception, now that they think restaurants are unsafe, because of the brush that weѻýve been painted with.ѻý
Effective immediately, the Kelowna Chamber said itѻýs time to rally behind local businesses, especially restaurants.
ѻýWe understand that swift action is needed to curb the dangerous trend upwards, but government needs to find a way to provide more time for businesses to prepare for such sweeping orders which in this case come into effect with less than 12 hours notice,ѻý said Dan Rogers, Executive Director of the Kelowna Chamber.
Rogers said more notice is needed to help ѻýlessen the blowѻý to restaurants.
- With files from Tom Fletcher
READ MORE: B.C. stops indoor dining, fitness, religious service due to COVID-19 spike
READ MORE: B.C. should help 20-39 year olds ѻýjust like we did for seniorsѻý amid COVID surge: Furstenau
Do you have something to add to this story, or something else we should report on? Email: phil.mclachlan@kelownacapnews.com
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