NYC restaurants navigating government red tape amid pandemic

New York City restaurants and bars reopened for outdoor dining in June, hoping that it would help keep their businesses above water until the coronavirus pandemic passes. But restaurant owners and industry insiders are now saying that onerous regulations and endless red tape are needlessly hampering their ability to operate.

The hospitality industry in New York City has been hammered by the coronavirus, as it has in the rest of the world. According to a June survey by the New York Hospitality Alliance, a third of NYC restaurants couldn’t pay their rent in June, and 80 percent could only pay part of their rent.

Outdoor dining reopened on June 22 and offered a lifeline to the struggling businesses, but confusion and conflicting information from the city and state governments slowed the rollout.

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Andrew Rigie, the executive director of the New York Hospitality Alliance, said more than 9,000 of the city's roughly 25,000 restaurants are now using outdoor dining, which was supposed to have a seamless, no-cost permit process.

"The challenge was - a few days after the program launched, they retroactively changed some of the requirements concerning the roadside seating for safety purposes," Rigie said. "And that created a lot of concern because many restaurants had already built out their outdoor dining areas, and had to retroactively refit it. It cost money they didn't have, and headaches."

Luigi Militello, the owner of Luke's Bar & Grill on the Upper East Side, said the city's confusing red tape ended up costing him thousands of dollars at a time when money is already tight.

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"The roadway dining, for the first 10 days, they allowed us to do it. On the 11th day, they came with all the restrictions and guidelines to how they want it built. It cost me almost $5,000 to have mine built," Militello said. "Just to comply with their planters, and the height of it, and the width of it, and this and that. I don't know where it's going to stop. Well, it's going to stop when the majority of us have to close our doors."

The city's confusing rollout of its outdoor dining was just the beginning though, as other regulations have also been put in place about what hours a restaurant can keep and what they are allowed to serve. Notably, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo cracked down on outdoor drinking in mid-July, saying that “restaurants and bars statewide will be subject to new requirements that they must only serve alcohol to people who are ordering and eating food.” He further split hairs over what constitutes “substantive food,” saying that restaurants must serve “more than just hors d'oeuvres, chicken wings.”