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Indoor music venues will require proof of COVID vaccination

BY EVERYNIGHT CHARLEY CRESPO | Mayor de Blasio announced on Tuesday during a media advisory that, starting in two weeks, New Yorkers and visitors will need to show proof of COVID vaccination to engage in numerous congregate activities indoors.

Copying policies implemented in France and Italy, New York City will become the first major city in the United States where vaccinations will be required for all those wishing to dine in an indoor restaurant, drink at a bar, exercise at a gym or attend a live performance, for example. The municipal government will not mandate proof of vaccination for outdoor bars, outdoor restaurants or outdoor concert venues, among others.

So far, proof of vaccination is the only restriction that New York City will impose. Unlike in the past, social distancing, capacity limits and curfews will not be mandated for indoor businesses. Stricter protocols like lockdowns are not being considered.

De Blasio has publicly spoken about his proposed policy but has not yet put it down in writing. The Mayor’s Office will issue the regulations when they become mandatory procedure on Aug. 16. At that time, a four-week honor-code period will begin, allowing businesses to acclimate and the city to make adjustments. Inspections and enforcement are scheduled to start on Sept. 13.

“Today, I announce a new approach, which we’re calling the Key to NYC Pass,” the mayor said. “The key to New York City — when you hear those words, I want you to imagine the notion that because someone’s vaccinated, they can do all the amazing things that are available in this city. This is a miraculous place, literally full of wonders. And, if you’re vaccinated, all that’s going to open up to you. You’ll have the key. You can open the door.

Liv Warfield performed at Café Wha? on MacDougal St. indoors on July 28. Patrons will have to be vaccinated to enter the indoor performance space. (Photo by Everynight Charley Crespo)

“But, if you’re unvaccinated, unfortunately, you will not be able to participate in many things. That’s the point we’re trying to get across. It’s time for people to see vaccination as literally necessary to living a good and full and healthy life.

“The Key to NYC Pass will be a first-in-the-nation approach,” the mayor said. “It will require vaccination for workers and customers in indoor dining, in indoor fitness facilities, indoor entertainment facilities. This is going to be a requirement. The only way to patronize these establishments indoors will be if you’re vaccinated, at least one dose. The same for folks in terms of work, they’ll need at least one dose.

“This is crucial because we know that this will encourage a lot more vaccination,” he continued. “We’ve seen it already. We’ve seen the impact of the mandate we put in place for city workers already starting to move people to vaccination. We’ve obviously seen the positive impact of incentive, as well. The goal here is to convince everyone that this is the time. If we’re going to stop the Delta variant, the time is now. And that means getting vaccinated right now.”

Impact on the live-music industry

Radio City Music Hall and the Beacon Theatre implemented a vaccination-only admission policy upon reopening this spring. Several Downtown music venues, including Arlene’s Grocery, City Winery NYC, Mercury Lounge, Rockwood Music Hall and Terra Blues, implemented a similar policy upon reopening this spring. Enforcement waned at the smaller venues as state regulations relaxed.

In August, however, these and all other venues will require proof of vaccination not only from customers, but also from performers and staff. City Winery, a forerunner in the vax-only movement since 2020, predated the mayor’s announcement and went even further. The Chelsea venue announced last week in an open letter that, starting this past Monday, the franchise would implement a vaccination-only or negative-test policy at all of its 12 venues in eight cities.

The unvaccinated will be unwelcome even at some outdoor events, like the five NYC Homecoming Week concerts that the city is sponsoring in August.

Unless the venues themselves declare otherwise, unvaccinated music fans will be limited to attending large outdoor concerts at Citi Field and Forest Hills Stadium, as well as midsized park series at SummerStage Central Park and the Celebrate Brooklyn shows in Prospect Park. Many smaller venues, like the Anyway Café, Baby Brasa, Café Wha, Groove, Marshall Stack and Rue-B, have viewing areas outside.

Palace Hound played at Arlene’s Grocery on Stanton St. on July 29. The unvaccinated will not be able to enter the venue but can watch pay-per-view livestreams of its concerts almost nightly. (Photo by Everynight Charley Crespo)

The biggest dilemma involves dozens of larger music venues that were to re-enter the live music circuit in August and September and have already sold hundreds of tickets to unvaccinated customers. These include Barclays Center, the Bowery Ballroom, the Brooklyn Bowl, Brooklyn Made, Brooklyn Steel, the Gramercy Theatre, Irving Plaza, Madison Square Garden, the Music Hall of Williamsburg, Terminal 5, Warsaw and Webster Hall, among many others. All of these venues booked and are selling tickets for concerts into 2022.

More than likely, this new policy will create a reassessment by concert promoters and venue operators regarding the ever-fluctuating state of the live-music industry. Larger venues, from arenas to theaters and large clubs, have already sold tickets to forthcoming events without being able to inform the ticket holders that they must be vaccinated to gain entry.

Unvaccinated musicians will be largely out of work in New York City. If the talent buyers and booking agents follow the new municipal regulations, unvaccinated musicians will only be able to perform at outdoor venues within the city limits. Unvaxxed local musicians will likely have to seek additional gigs in the suburban communities rather than in the city.

Current staff within the hospitality industry will need to be vaccinated in order to keep their jobs. This will happen at a time when many bars, restaurants and concert venue managers presently report an ongoing shortage of staff. Requiring new hires to be vaccinated will further limit the available pool of employees.

Brianna Musco performed at Mercury Lounge on July 24. The East Houston St. music club has been a vaccination-only venue since reopening. (Photo by Everynight Charley Crespo)

“Mandating vaccine requirements for restaurant and bar employees and customers to work and dine indoors is a very difficult step, but ultimately may prove an essential move to protecting public health and ensuring that New York City does not revert to restrictions and shutdown orders that would again absolutely devastate small businesses that have not yet recovered from the pandemic,” Andrew Rigie, executive director of the NYC Hospitality Alliance restaurant group, posted.

“Not everyone’s going to agree with this, I understand that, but, for so many people, this is going to be the lifesaving act — that we’re putting a mandate in place,” the mayor concluded. “It’s going to guarantee a much higher level of vaccination in this city, and that is the key to protecting people and the key to our recovery. That’s why it’s the Key to NYC. The Key to NYC pass opens a lot of doors and we need it.

“We’ll be issuing a mayoral executive order and a health commissioner’s order — those are the legal tools necessary to implement this approach,” de Blasio explained. “And we know that this is what’s going to turn the tide. And we also know that people are going to get a really clear message — if you want to participate in our society fully, you’ve got to get vaccinated. You’ve got to get vaccinated. It’s time.

“All the answers, all the information’s out there,” the mayor added. “You’ve seen over 160 million Americans get vaccinated safely. You’ve seen it make the difference. The only reason we’re having the recovery is vaccination. So, it’s time. And this is going to send that message clearly. And the Key to NYC Pass, this is an easy approach. Because to confirm vaccination all you need is your vaccination card or the NYC COVID SAFE app, or the Excelsior app from the state — any of those will do. So, it’s simple. Just show it and you’re in.”

For more of Everynight Charley Crespo’s coverage of the city’s music scene, check out his blog, The Manhattan Beat.

One Comment

  1. Suzan Mazur Suzan Mazur August 5, 2021

    New Yorkers are counting the seconds until the end of the current city administration and its inept policies. The latest decree CANNOT at all be justified: “Covid-19 vaccination papers please” for entry to NYC restaurants, gyms and entertainment venues, which the employees of various eateries, gyms, and performance spaces will then review for your personal medical history. The mandate has no basis in reality, since the current science is that Covid-19 vaccines wane after 6 weeks and 50% after 10 weeks, per The Lancet /Virus Watch papers published in July:

    “However, we found these levels dropped substantially over the course of 2 – 3 months. If they carry on dropping at this rate, we are concerned that the protective effects of the vaccines may also begin to wear off, particularly against new variants; but we cannot yet predict how soon that might happen.” https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2021/jul/vaccine-antibody-levels-start-wane-around-2-3-months

    The de Blasio decree is absurd and reeks of injustice, like Open Restaurants without the consent of New York’s residents and the ensuing mayhem that continues to destroy our neighborhoods. https://oscillations.net/2021/07/26/list-west-village-as-unesco-world-heritage-site/

    “Papers please” is seriously stepping over the line. . . ANC’s Johnny Makhatini would call the de Blasio Pass a “badge of slavery.”

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