The Path to Recovery: How to Re-Open America

Nearly 16,000 restaurants have closed permanently due to the pandemic, Yelp data shows
There have been 26,160 total restaurant closures
https://abcnews.go.com/Business/160...ntly-due-pandemic-yelp-data/story?id=71943970

Volatility has been a kiss of death for thousands of restaurants during the coronavirus pandemic.

Abrupt closures, inconsistent reopenings, changes in public health guidance for operations and other state-mandated orders have pushed the food service industry to the brink.

MORE: Restaurant, food service industry has lost nearly $120B due to pandemic
New data from Yelp revealed the stark reality of permanent closures for an alarming number of restaurants, which already ran on thin margins.

The review site's latest Local Economic Impact Report, released Wednesday, showed that 60% of the restaurants that temporarily closed due to the pandemic have since shuttered for good.

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There were 26,160 total restaurant closures on Yelp as of July 10 and 15,770 of those have made the decision permanent, according to Yelp.


"The restaurant industry now reflects the highest total business closures, recently surpassing retail," the report stated.

Chefs, general managers, owners, bartenders and diners have all attempted to raise their voices to get aid for the hard-hit sector. But those cries have been drowned out by the sound of businesses boarding up their eateries, shuttering service for good.

"Restaurants are known to run on thin margins, which makes a forced closure even more painful for the industry," Justin Norman, vice president of data science at Yelp, told ABC News.


Norman said that the company's latest numbers draw a painful correlation for what could come next.

"Unfortunately, we expect these closures to continue," Norman said. "As COVID-19 cases continue to rise across the county, we anticipate states will roll back or delay reopening plans, which will inevitably impact the future success of all businesses, including restaurants, possibly turning even more temporary closures into permanent ones."

Restaurant owners have been forced to quickly come up with new adaptations on menus, points of service, hours, delivery and takeout models that better serve their local communities just to keep the lights on.

Yelp looked at changes to service options, delivery and takeaway, but many of the site's registered restaurants were still unable to sustain their businesses.

Independent restaurants and larger chains have applied for government assistance in the interim as they continue to iterate on what works.

"We’ve already seen a ton of success from restaurants that have expanded their takeout and delivery options, some are even offering meal kits, drink kits, cooking classes and pivoting their use of technology," Norman said, citing the company's waitlist platform that manages curbside pickup.

Like so many restaurants that have scrambled to make it work, Canlis, a landmark spot in the Pacific Northwest, successfully turned its fine dining model on its head and transformed more than once. First, it existed as a drive-thru burger stand, then a coffee and bagel shop. It added farm-to-table produce kits, full dinner deliveries with virtual bingo and finally established itself as an entirely outdoor crab shack built specifically to accommodate social distancing, owner Mark Canlis explained to ABC News.

But for restaurants without the capital or capacity to back up lofty changes like that, closing permanently has become an unfortunate reality around the U.S.

Restaurants have lost more revenue and jobs than any other industry, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. A survey from the National Restaurant Association in June showed food service lost nearly $120 billion in sales during just the first three months of the pandemic.


In addition to the grim reality for restaurants, bars and clubs have endured an especially high closure rate as a result of coronavirus.

The bar and nightlife industry, which is six times smaller than the restaurant industry, tallied 5,454 total business closures -- 2,429 of which are permanent -- according to Yelp.

Despite the devastating dining numbers, the popular online business directory site and app also reported some encouraging data on spending behavior in the restaurant category.

Since June 1, Yelp saw consumer interest rise in steakhouses, French food, live and raw food, as well as German cuisine.

Yelp users have also shown increased interest in alcohol-related experiences with breweries up 24% and wineries up 51%.

Additionally, user interest in Black-owned businesses has remained high since Yelp's Local Economic Impact Report last month, with searches for the category up 2,508% on the platform.

Probably a good time to open one.
 
Probably a good time to open one.
Man I drove by a strip center today in a primo area.... 2 anchor tenants, off the top of my head I forget one, but the other was a Planet Fitness. I couldn't believe my eyes..... everything in between the two was empty. I don't mean closed, I mean empty.
 
Man I drove by a strip center today in a primo area.... 2 anchor tenants, off the top of my head I forget one, but the other was a Planet Fitness. I couldn't believe my eyes..... everything in between the two was empty. I don't mean closed, I mean empty.

There have been other ominous developments, but ironically enough, I’ve been so busy at work, I’ve been building up a sleep debt! More to follow, but for now, good night!
 
Man I drove by a strip center today in a primo area.... 2 anchor tenants, off the top of my head I forget one, but the other was a Planet Fitness. I couldn't believe my eyes..... everything in between the two was empty. I don't mean closed, I mean empty.

But if you want to open one now. You build it out with covid in mind. More outdoor seating etc. maybe open like couple months from now. Kinda like your liquor lic idea.
 
But if you want to open one now. You build it out with covid in mind. More outdoor seating etc. maybe open like couple months from now. Kinda like your liquor lic idea.

And then what? You develop a successful model that requires the presence of covid.

So then you become like Here4Money and Usual Tard, praying for more covid and cringing when you hear about possible vaccines. Praying for lockdowns forever.
 
And then what? You develop a successful model that requires the presence of covid.

So then you become like Here4Money and Usual Tard, praying for more covid and cringing when you hear about possible vaccines. Praying for lockdowns forever.

No, with the loss of restaurants during covid, your competition will now be thinner and some don’t have outside seating. I see tons of closed never to be open again restaurants down here. I wouldn’t be praying for a lockdown at all. Just entering a market that might be right for the reaping. I said build out using covid in mind in case needed In the future. And by now I don’t necessarily mean today as we might be in the 1st inning.
 
And then what? You develop a successful model that requires the presence of covid.

So then you become like Here4Money and Usual Tard, praying for more covid and cringing when you hear about possible vaccines. Praying for lockdowns forever.


What Here4BS and Usual Dumdum do not realize is when the extreme liberals succeed in destroying lots of businesses that are shutdown and ends up bankrupt, they will suffer the same fate in their own countries. They will lose their jobs and their taxes will go thru the roof like all the extreme liberal run Democrat states in the US. Business shutdowns also, have the added bonus of hurting more extreme liberals like communist professors, extreme liberal, elite colleges and universities, extreme liberals in lower paying jobs whose businesses have gone under. So, keep rooting for US deaths, US job lossses and the US economy tanking. When the US market is one of the largest in the world, how will your countries do without the US purchasing your country's goods as before? That is right. You will lose tens of millions of jobs, just like the US. Enjoy it dummies.
 
But if you want to open one now. You build it out with covid in mind. More outdoor seating etc. maybe open like couple months from now. Kinda like your liquor lic idea.
..... And sports betting.
Lots and lots of sports betting. ;)
 
A rarely agree with Paul Krugman but I agree with him here...
“We squandered the chance to actually bring this thing (the coronavirus) under control".


Paul Krugman: ‘One Way Or Another, The Economy Is Going To Lock Down Again
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/paul...iction-coronavirus_n_5f2138a0c5b66859f1f40147

“One way or another, the economy is going to lock down again,” warned Paul Krugman on Tuesday night.

“This is where we’ve gotten to,” the noted economist lamented to CNN’s Don Lemon. “We squandered the chance to actually bring this thing (the coronavirus) under control,” he said, pointing to the premature reopening of states (encouraged by President Donald Trump), which led to a devastating resurgence of COVID-19.

Krugman predicted a new lockdown would come about either “because governors and hopefully the president finally says ‘OK, we screwed it up, we need to do it over again’ or just because people are too afraid” to go out and resume business as usual.

The economist, awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 2008, also cast doubt on Trump’s upbeat assessment of the economy.

Krugman, who earlier this month slammed the Trump administration’s handling of the public health crisis with an analogy about the Titanic, noted how “every indicator we have is that the recovery has stalled.”

 
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