Joe Vanhorn, who owns Chelsea Tavern on Market Street, said his restaurant returned to about 50% of pre-pandemic operations well before restaurant week began. But he said it feels good to participate in an event again.
“Where we don’t see people back yet is lunch, so I’m curious to see how lunch goes, if it draws anybody back, because there’s still relatively very small workforce downtown, as far as the banks and insurance companies, and the Grand and the Queen, all those places are still working from home, and I think that’s where we see the biggest impact of the pandemic,” Vanhorn said.
“People still live downtown, so our night business, although affected, was not as bad, and to-go was up … We’ll see what restaurant week does, but our business is coming back. It’s just coming back differently, more takeout and dinner than lunch.”
Though customers are returning to restaurants, these businesses still face challenges, Leishman said. Restaurants are having a difficult time filling open positions, for many reasons: restaurants reopened at the same time, some workers have issues getting childcare, and many people are making more money on federal unemployment than they would on restaurant wages and tips.
“There’s a reluctance to come back to work among many people in our communities. And we really have to change that,” Leishman said. “I have restaurants every day that are closing down on certain days of the week or shifts because they simply can’t work people seven days a week. They don’t have enough workers. It really will hamper the growth and sort of the recovery of our industry.”