Eater
After a Saturday night with many restaurants and bars
filled with people, more government officials are calling for a
shutdown of public spaces to help curb the spread of COVID-19 —
including closing restaurants and bars.
On Sunday afternoon, City Council speaker Corey Johnson joined in
on the cacophony of voices calling for a shutdown of “non-essential”
businesses, including restaurants and bars, though he added that
delivery services should stay open.
Brad Ladner,
the city councilman for Brooklyn neighborhoods such as Park Slope and
Carroll Gardens, and Comptroller Scott Stringer, “out of an abundance of
caution,” called for closures
earlier in the weekend. And Councilman Mark Levine, who chairs the
Council Committee on Health, said that many venues were violating the
new state order requiring businesses to reduce capacity in half. He too
called for a shutdown, under the hashtag #shutdownNYC, pointing to the health of staff, who have no choice but to show up.
Meanwhile, on Saturday night in nearby Hoboken, Mayor Ravinder Bhalla banned
all restaurants from having dine-in customers and closed bars without
food all together, also implementing a 10 p.m. curfew for residents. The
development came about after a person who got into a bar fight in
Hoboken waited more than 30 minutes for an ambulance due to a strained
health system, Bhalla wrote in a press release.
“This is not OK. This is not a drill. This is dangerous,” Levine tweeted.
3 comments:
I just lost my bartending job AND singing & playing guitar gig (street performer) in the subway.
All with in 1 hour of each other!!
@Zoe
I saw two performers on the subway yesterday.
Are you saying that the MTA are hiring musicians to play on the platforms? Only asking because a lot of them don't look like struggling buskers.
What are Hookers doing with all this going on ?
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