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Home / World

Covid-19 coronavirus: A 'new normal', as Georgia restaurants allowed to reopen

By Kate Brumback, Russ Bynum
Other·
27 Apr, 2020 10:54 PM6 mins to read

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As New Zealand wakes up under Alert Level 3, PM Jacinda Ardern talks to Newstalk ZB’s Mike Hosking about Covid-19 checkpoints, Deborah Russell, and the wage subsidy scheme. Audio / Newstalk ZB

With tables wide apart and staff wearing masks, some Georgia restaurants reopened for limited dine-in service today as the state loosened more coronavirus restrictions.

But many eateries remained closed amid concerns that serving in-house meals could put employees and customers at risk.

The dine-in service and movie screenings were allowed to resume a few days after some other businesses, including barbershops, gyms, tattoo shops and nail salons, began seeing customers.

While many of those establishments gratefully opened their doors at the weekend after a month-long closure, others did not feel ready. A similar mixed response played out today.

"We're ecstatic to have them back," said Chris Heithaus, who manages 87 Waffle House restaurants in coastal areas of Georgia and the Carolinas. "A lot of people, I think, want to get back to the new normal, which will be social distancing and all that. But they will be able to eat inside the restaurant."

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U.S. intelligence agencies warned Trump more than a dozen times in the President’s Daily Brief during January and February, the period during which Trump dismissed the danger, @gregpmiller & @nakashimae report https://t.co/9zEuyn1RYs

— Philip Rucker (@PhilipRucker) April 27, 2020

The "new normal" at the popular chain known for hash brown breakfasts and its ability to stay open even in the face of natural disasters, included employees wearing masks, booths closed to keep customers apart and traditional plastic place mat menus replaced by disposable paper menus.

Waffle House spokeswoman Njeri Boss said 330 of the chain's 400 Georgia restaurants stayed open for takeaway orders during the lockdown, and most of them were expected to start serving dine-in customers today.

Governor Brian Kemp announced last week that he would relax restrictions despite health experts' warnings of a potential surge in infections and disapproval from US President Donald Trump.

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Kemp issued 39 requirements that restaurants must follow if they reopen, including observing a limit of 10 customers per 46 sq m and ensuring that all employees wear face coverings all the time. Cinema ushers were ordered to enforce social distancing.

Trump asked whether he takes responsibility after reports that more Americans are ingesting disinfectants to fight COVID19. Trump, "No, I don't." pic.twitter.com/G7jGCqJxCx

— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) April 27, 2020

At Plucked Up Chicken & Biscuits in Columbus, eight regulars showed up to have coffee and breakfast and "chatted at each other across the room," manager Alesha Webster said.

The restaurant followed the Governor's restrictions, including constantly disinfecting and sanitising, placing tables 2m apart and practicing social distancing, Webster said. The restrictions also mean only 10 customers can be inside at a time, rather than the normal capacity of 45.

The outbreak has been brutal on such a small business, even though the restaurant offered to-go orders, Webster said. The decision to reopen for dine-in service was difficult, she said.

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"You don't want people to bash you because you're just trying to make ends meet," she said.

After opening following the coronavirus pandemic, Tonya Muckenfuss works on Brandee Anderson's hair at Southern Roots Beauty Shop in Augusta, Georgia. Photo / AP
After opening following the coronavirus pandemic, Tonya Muckenfuss works on Brandee Anderson's hair at Southern Roots Beauty Shop in Augusta, Georgia. Photo / AP

Alex Brounstein, the owner of Atlanta-based burger chain, Grindhouse Killer Burgers, said he had no plans to reopen today, and he questioned how any restaurant can resume dine-in service while maintaining social distance or other precautions to prevent the virus from spreading.

"You're talking about people putting their mouths on things in your restaurant. You now have dirty dishes going back into your kitchen. To me, it's just completely illogical," he said.

Mary Mac's Tea Room, an Atlanta institution that opened in 1945 and serves up Southern specialties, also planned to remain closed for now. While managers respect the Governor's decision, they don't believe it's in the best interests or safety of their staff or customers to reopen yet, a message on the restaurant's Facebook page said.

Signs are emerging of a shift in focus from the White House toward reopening the U.S. and beginning to resuscitate a stalled economy that is the ticket to President Trump’s reelectionhttps://t.co/ZRGKVC2BgT

— POLITICO (@politico) April 27, 2020

"We miss seeing all of your smiling faces and catching up over crispy fried chicken, mac and cheese, and collard greens! We look forward to sharing these times again soon, but only when it is safe to do so," the message said.

Even those who ventured out were doing so with caution.

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At the Savannah Waffle House, regular customer Corey Brooks ordered a waffle and pork chops and noted how quiet the normally bustling restaurant is.

He's still working from home, and he still thinks it's too soon to return to the office or get a haircut.

"This would be the only restaurant I would come and sit in," Brooks said. "I know the people here."

The pandemic may fuel a growing populist backlash against political, economic, and cultural liberalism, @CooleyOnEurasia and @dhnexon write.https://t.co/UQooSnZQgx

— Foreign Policy (@ForeignPolicy) April 27, 2020

The shutdown imposed to slow the spread of the coronavirus has caused tremendous damage to the US economy.

About a fifth of the state's workforce — 1.1 million workers — filed for unemployment in the five weeks since the crisis started, according to the Georgia Department of Labour.

But public health experts say increased testing and diligent tracking of infected people's contacts are needed to guard against a spike in new cases if reopening happens too quickly.

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Just want to underscore how absolutely psychotic it is that this has to be happening right now. This is the kind of thing you see in dystopian movies after the federal government is nuked. What an unparalleled disgrace. https://t.co/C3n1Cx1DIz

— Eric Geller (@ericgeller) April 27, 2020

Georgia has ranked in the bottom 10 of states for testing per capita, but some progress was made on that front last week.

State and local health officials in Georgia are also teaming up with the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention to do antibody testing to get an idea of how many people have already been infected with the virus.

Public health workers plan to visit randomly selected homes in two Atlanta counties from April 28 to May 4 to ask residents to answer questions and provide a blood sample, according to a news release from the state Department of Public Health.

Antibody tests cannot determine if a person has an active case of Covid-19, but they can identify people who were infected but did not have symptoms or were not tested.

- AP

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