Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
Life

Restaurants brace for cold weather, second wave

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Sep, 2020 10:48 PM
  • Restaurants brace for cold weather, second wave

Two things are keeping Brenda O'Reilly’s restaurants in Newfoundland and Labrador afloat: Government subsidies and patios.

“Patios have been a real godsend,” the owner of four St. John’s restaurants said in an interview Friday. “They’re the reason I can even smile.”

Canada’s restaurant industry is bracing for the impact of patio closures as cold weather arrives, with experts saying the loss of open-air seating could be devastating.

With pandemic restrictions limiting indoor seating to 50 per cent of maximum capacity, many restaurant operators are coming up with ways to keep patios open longer.

O'Reilly said she has solar heaters and is asking diners to BYOB: Bring Your Own Blanket.

“Everyone knows it's safer to be outside,” said O'Reilly, whose restaurants include O’Reilly’s Irish Newfoundland Pub and Yellowbelly Brewery and Public House.

“We’re looking at ways to extend our patio season through the fall,” she said, noting that they’re planning to decorate the patios for Christmas.

“But at some point, we’re going to get cold and it’s going to snow.”

Food service experts say without targeted government aid, the combination of reduced seating capacity from shuttered patios and a potential second wave of COVID-19 could cripple the industry.

David Lefebvre, vice-president of Restaurants Canada, is calling on Ottawa to directly support the industry through meal subsidies.

While the throne speech extended the federal wage subsidy and a business aid program, he said subsidizing customer meals would directly help struggling restaurants survive.

“We’ve seen this rolled out in the U.K. where basically the government picks up half the tab for a meal during off-peak hours,” Lefebvre said. “The idea is not to subsidize diners, but to subsidize the restaurants.”

He added: “Restaurants are really in dire straits. This would give a helping hand to struggling businesses.

Sylvain Charlebois, professor of food distribution and policy at Dalhousie University, agreed that more targeted aid is needed for the food service industry.

But he dismissed the meal subsidies as “food stamps for the rich.”

“New Brunswick’s rebate program on food and drink is a better alternative,” said Charlebois, also the director of the Halifax university’s Agri-Food Analytics Lab.

The province’s Explore NB Travel Incentive Program allows New Brunswickers to apply for a 20 per cent rebate on eligible expenses, including food and drinks at restaurants, up to $1,000.

“It’s about empowering consumers to get out, spend money and deduct some of their expenses,” Charlebois said.

“When people go out to eat, they’ll buy other things and stimulate the economy.”

Lefebvre said the bottom line is restaurants need a lifeline to make it through the winter in a pandemic.

He said about 10 per cent of the industry is already shut down – close to 10,000 restaurants across the country. Without further support, he said the industry group expects that could climb by another 30 per cent.

“We have a high percentage of independent, family-operated restaurants that can’t take on more debt,” Lefebvre said. “It will be dark times ahead if we don’t see more support.”

O'Reilly said that staying open is good for the mental health of her workers, the general public and the economy.

"I've got to keep my staff working, keep the economy going and keep people from going crazy," she said. "It's not good for your psyche to see everything closing down."

O'Reilly added: "People's mental health is very fragile right now, including mine. I need to be working, I'm not built to not work. I need to keep my businesses going."

MORE Life ARTICLES

B.C. Ferries Floats Terminal Consolidation And Service Cuts To Nanaimo

B.C. Ferries Floats Terminal Consolidation And Service Cuts To Nanaimo
VICTORIA — B.C. Ferries is proposing service cuts and terminal consolidations on a popular route between Vancouver and central Vancouver Island.

B.C. Ferries Floats Terminal Consolidation And Service Cuts To Nanaimo

YouTube Cooking Shows Help Pet Owners Dish Up Easy, Homemade Alternatives To Commercial Kibble

YouTube Cooking Shows Help Pet Owners Dish Up Easy, Homemade Alternatives To Commercial Kibble
No one knows that better than Kris Rotonda and Denise Fernandez, the couple who conceived the Doggy Cooking Network and founded online dating service YouMustLoveDogsDating.com, where pooch-loving singles can connect with potential mates.

YouTube Cooking Shows Help Pet Owners Dish Up Easy, Homemade Alternatives To Commercial Kibble

What to discuss when death is near

What to discuss when death is near
A study has identified the top five things doctors should discuss with hospitalised patients and their families as they near the end of their lives....

What to discuss when death is near

Women have higher risk of injury than men post-drinking

Women have higher risk of injury than men post-drinking

Woman who find alcohol hard to resist even after three standard drinks are more likely to suffer ...

Women have higher risk of injury than men post-drinking

Find Out! If Your Husband Is Two Timing You?

Find Out! If Your Husband Is Two Timing You?
Although husband wife relationship is one such bond which flourish in the soil of trust and loyalty. But if we talk about the ongoing epoch then even infidelity is one of the conspicuous and caustic truths prevailing in present day marital bonds. 

Find Out! If Your Husband Is Two Timing You?

Globetrotting Travel Writer Pico Iyer's New Book 'Art Of Stillness' Makes Case For Staying Put

Globetrotting Travel Writer Pico Iyer's New Book 'Art Of Stillness' Makes Case For Staying Put
RIO DE JANEIRO — Pico Iyer has spent the past several decades on the move, incessantly hopping from one far-flung destination — Ethiopia, Morocco, Indonesia — to another. But the globetrotting travel writer is now convinced the most exciting place to go is nowhere at all.

Globetrotting Travel Writer Pico Iyer's New Book 'Art Of Stillness' Makes Case For Staying Put