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Coronavirus: Alberta restaurants expect staggered start when reopening begins

WATCH ABOVE: Eateries throughout Alberta are preparing to reopen after shutting down earlier this year due to COVID-19. Lauren Pullen has details on the guidelines released by the province on Monday that each eatery must follow. – May 12, 2020

A food service industry spokesman says he expects a staggered start when restaurants get the green light Thursday to reopen in Alberta.

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Mark von Schellwitz, western vice-president for Restaurants Canada, says owners are crunching numbers to see if they can at least break even by opening at half capacity while still paying existing and new costs, retraining staff and adapting to health measures to limit the spread of COVID-19.

“It’s like basically reopening a new business,” von Schellwitz said Tuesday.

“They’re going to operate on their own timeline … that can range any time in the next week, (while) some may even take a couple of weeks to get fully open.”

An emergency committee with the provincial cabinet was to meet Tuesday night to officially decide whether reopening could take place as planned on Thursday.

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Schellwitz said restauranteurs appreciate guidelines issued Monday by the province, but are seeking further information on health and safety rules and details on how, for example, mall food courts will operate versus stand-alone restaurants.

Restaurants, retailers, hair stylists and barbers and daycares are among the businesses being allowed to resume services this week as COVID-19 case numbers and hospitalizations suggest Alberta has flattened the curve of infections.

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Public gatherings are still limited to no more than 15 people.

Economic Development Minister Tanya Fir has said information and health guidelines are to be updated online as more businesses and sectors reopen.

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For now, restaurants, bars, pubs and patios must operate at half capacity with a minimum two-metre distance between tables.

Von Schellwitz said larger problems remain for the industry and its 11,000 restaurants in Alberta. He said more help is needed with core problems such as rent relief, access to operating capital, and wage subsidies to get them through the crisis.

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“Half the restaurants in Alberta were closed during this whole pandemic, (while) some reopened slightly for takeout and delivery,” he said.

“Our last survey indicated that 70 per cent of (Alberta) members are concerned that they will not have enough liquidity to pay their vendors, rent, and other expenses over the next three months.”

NDP Opposition Leader Rachel Notley said Premier Jason Kenney’s government needs to provide direct financial support for small businesses through grants and rent relief.

Notley said there should be $5,000 per business for physical improvements to meet public-health orders, $5,000 for startup costs related to retail and services sectors, and $10,000 for the hospitality sector, given that the industry has perishable inventory.

She also said the government’s guidelines lack detail on which rules are recommended and which ones are mandatory.

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“It’s not confidence-instilling, and Albertans need to see better,” said Notley.

“My very strong impression of what happened here is the UCP cabinet set a date for reopening and then the public service was forced to scramble after the fact to put together guidelines.”

Business owner Brittany Anderson, who joined Notley at the news conference, said she has used federal wage subsidies to help keep staff on, but needs help with big-ticket costs such as rent.

“We’re seeing light at the end of the tunnel, but we need help getting there,” said Anderson, whose company provides virtual gaming and laser tag.

“I don’t know anyone in the business community that can go without revenue for six months without any help.”

Guidance on who Albertans should and shouldn’t go out to eat with

In her daily update on the COVID-19 situation in Alberta Tuesday afternoon, the chief medical officer of health provided a bit more guidance for Albertans hoping to grab a meal or drink at a restaurant in the coming days and weeks.

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Dr. Deena Hinshaw stressed that unless appropriate physical distance can be maintained the entire time, people should only dine-in with people in their household or cohort.

“We continue to advise that when you’re closer than two metres to someone — especially sharing food and drink — that puts you at risk of transmitting the virus,” Hinshaw said.

“The recommendation would be that if you can go and sit two metres apart from someone and maintain that two-metre distance the entire time you’re there, then that would be the only condition that we would recommend that you’re sitting with someone outside your family or your cohort.”

Hinshaw on Tuesday reported 1,361 active cases of COVID-19 in Alberta along with 118 deaths. Hospitalization rates remain flat. There are 73 people in hospital, 12 of whom are in intensive care.

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With files from Global News.

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