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Mayor: It’s time to ‘double down’ on outdoor dining

BY THE VILLAGE SUN | Speaking Wednesday, Mayor de Blasio broke what he called some “tough news”: The city’s plan to allow indoor dining is on hold — possibly for at least the entire summer. 

That’s because it’s not safe to allow people back inside restaurants yet, he said. On the other hand, he declared it’s time to “double down” on outdoor dining. 

The city had been set to move to phase three for reopening this coming Monday following the Fourth of July weekend. That would have allowed restaurants to reopen for indoor dining — though only at 50 percent seating capacity.

At a sidewalk seating area on Second Ave. in the East Village. (Photo by The Village Sun)

But with coronavirus infections surging scarily around the U.S., the mayor said it’s best for now to hold off on indoor dining until “the right moment.”

“We know a lot of other parts of this country, very sadly, made decisions [on reopening] based on something other than the data and in the heat of the moment,” he said. “And now what we’re seeing in Florida, what we’re seeing in Texas, even California that tried really hard to get it right, slipping backwards.”

This restaurant on Second Ave. left the bike lane open. Streetsblog reported that some restaurants were caught covering bike lanes with seating. (Photo by The Village Sun)

De Blasio said the data in those and other states have not been just bad but “shockingly worse.” He noted that Dr. Fauci is now warning of the possibility of 100,000 new COVID-19 cases in the U.S. per day.

Fauci has singled out bars as a major problem in terms of where the virus is being spread right now. 

“We see a lot of problems and we particularly see problems revolving around people going back to bars and restaurants, indoors,” de Blasio said. “And indoors is the problem more and more, the science is showing it more and more.

“So, I want to make very clear — we cannot go ahead, at this point in time, with indoor dining in New York City. … I was hopeful we could, but the news we have gotten from around the country gets worse and worse all the time.”

Standing around and hanging out in an outside dining area on Avenue A on Saturday night. (Photo by The Village Sun)

Meanwhile, New York, which had been the pandemic’s U.S. epicenter, has been doing it right and the data for the city and state keep getting better. 

So, it’s time to “double down on outdoor dining,” the mayor said. So far, 6,600 restaurants have taken advantage of the city’s new Open Restaurants initiative.

The mayor said many more restaurants could benefit from the program and that the city is going to do “a huge outreach effort” to operators. 

“It’s been going on for days,” he said of the outreach, “but it’s going to deepen over the next few days with the Department of Small Business Services and Department of Transportation going out into communities, helping to show restaurants that qualify that they can take advantage of this right away, get a lot more business and do it in a safe way, which is outdoors.”

People stand while drinking and socializing outside a bar on Avenue A near E. Seventh St. on Saturday night. At least they were outside. (Photo by The Village Sun)

The mayor said he’s bullish on the idea that the Open Restaurants program can help eateries survive and bring revenue to them while also bringing back jobs. 

“Outdoor dining unquestionably has been a great hit,” he declared. “And I think the bottom line is that outdoors is working. Period. Outdoors is where we need to be to the maximum extent possible this summer as we fight back this disease. 

“We now have seen, through experience, the power of doing things outdoors, the power of the face coverings, the power of the social distancing,” he added. “So, let’s double down and let’s make sure that New Yorkers can do as much outdoors as possible going forward.”

However, the news won’t sit well with many locals, who charge the Open Restaurants program is lawless, with no enforcement of regulations. They say the sidewalk seating is both a health risk and a quality-of-license nuisance.

4 Comments

  1. David R. Marcus David R. Marcus July 2, 2020

    The sheer stupidity of young people sans masks is shocking and a strong indication we will not be able to loosen restrictions anytime soon. Selfish disregard for the public good at its worst. Shameful.

  2. Jane2 Jane2 July 1, 2020

    “Here’s why outdoor eating is better but still risky:

    1. Eating = no mask.

    2. Eating = spittle.

    3. Unless you’re eating with only people you live with or already had CV you’re 2 feet from them for 1+ hours.

    Space between tables protects others. But your table is a petrie dish.”

    -Philippe Reines@PhilippeReines Jun 30

  3. JANE J JANE J July 1, 2020

    Just not in the bike lane please, like the image

  4. Nancy Pasley Nancy Pasley July 1, 2020

    Who does he think he’s kidding? The Mayor didn’t stop indoor dining, he has no power to open or close it, the Governor did. And it’s precisely the out-of-control outdoor drinking that has led to this. The last thing we need is more of this mess. “Open Restaurants” with no enforcement of any rules should be scaled way back, not increased.

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