RESTAURANTS FEEL THE BACKLASH OF BARS' REFUSAL TO FOLLOW SAFETY MEASURES
In restaurants’ long and difficult march back to normal, bars are proving a terrible traveling companion.
Places that make most of their money from selling alcohol for on-premise consumption have been cited by one government figure after another as the triggers for halting or rolling back the reopening of businesses, including restaurants. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s express target for resuming shutdowns Friday were places that generate 51% of their revenues from beer, wine and spirits, though he also reined in restaurants’ ability to rebuild sales. Eating places had to reduce their capacities again to 50% of their pre-pandemic seating levels.
Less than two hours later, after health officials reported nearly 9,000 new cases of COVID-19 in the state, Florida's Department of Business and Professional Regulation announced via Twitter that on-premise consumption of alcohol would be banned effective immediately at bars. The daily count of new infections topped the old one-day record by about 63%.
Bars were also the villains cited by the governors of New York and Maine in their warnings that the resumption of on-premise service may be halted for hospitality establishments. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has already given state liquor authorities the power to instantly yank an establishment’s liquor license if it doesn’t follow social-distancing guidelines inside and up to 100 feet outside the place.
Maine Gov. Janet Mills showed she wasn't bluffing when she yanked one high-profile establishment's liquor license for resuming on-premise service ahead of schedule, and then halted the reopening of all bars indefinitely.
The liquor authorities of Texas and Florida similarly tried similar tactics to discourage bars from allowing patrons to congregate in large, closely packed groups. Texas, for instance, revoked the licenses of 17 drinking places after regulators visited 600 bars throughout the state. Several high-profile bars near college campuses in Florida similarly had their ability to sell liquor rescinded because they weren’t adhering to the rules. But other outlets failed to heed the wakeup call, triggering the new prohibitions in both states.