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Craft breweries push L.A. County to allow reopening with outside food vendors

by City News Service • August 25, 2020 9 Comments

[Image via L.A. County Brewers Guild]
LOS ANGELES – A coalition of Los Angeles County craft brewers who contend they are unfairly shuttered amid the coronavirus pandemic began a social media lobbying effort this week, imploring county leaders to again allow them to reopen for outdoor service by partnering with third-party food vendors.

But county officials said breweries are still considered “high-risk” businesses for possible spread of COVID-19, particularly among younger residents, and thus cannot be permitted to reopen.

The five-day lobbying effort — targeting a different Board of Supervisors member each day — is being organized by the Los Angeles County Brewers Guild, which includes nearly 100  craft breweries. The guild contends breweries without their own kitchens were authorized by the county in early June to offer outdoor dining and beverage service, with food provided by third-party vendors such as food trucks or pop-up kitchens.

But with a subsequent countywide spike in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations in the ensuing weeks, the county enacted stricter health restrictions later that month, forcing breweries without in-house food kitchens to close for all but carryout beer sales.

Brewers contend that restriction is the toughest of any county in the state, and came on the heels of some breweries investing large sums of money to set up outdoor dining spaces to comply with the earlier county health order. They also argue that breweries equipped with their own food kitchens were permitted to remain open with outdoor service, creating an un-level playing field within the industry.

“A little more than two-thirds of our membership are at a severe disadvantage currently,” the guild stated on its website, noting that some breweries are “hanging on by a thread.”

“Although the limited caps on outdoor dining won’t guarantee our businesses will survive, it allows us to have a fighting chance,” according to the guild.

The county Department of Public Health, in a statement to City News Service, said the rate of community spread of COVID-19 still makes it unfeasible to reopen breweries.

“At this time, we are still seeing concerning levels of community spread and high case counts of COVID-19,” according to the county. “Because of that, we do not recommend businesses considered to be places where COVID-19 can spread easily to be reopened. Wineries, bars and other alcohol-focused businesses are in this high-risk category.

“… We understand this is a hardship for local business owners and we want to get to a place where it is safe to continue  on our recovery journey and re-open our local businesses. The task in front of us is to be able to thread the needle so that we continue with our recovery journey while protecting the health and well-being of our residents, our workforce and our community.”

County Supervisor Janice Hahn said she was an early advocate of reopening businesses back in May with proper safety protocols, but subsequent spikes in cases forced rollbacks.

“I am worried about the toll these closures have taken on our local breweries, and while it doesn’t seem fair, these are the tough decisions our public health experts are making to protect people and slow the spread of this virus,” Hahn said.

–

Filed Under: Business, Home, Los Angeles County

9 comments for "Craft breweries push L.A. County to allow reopening with outside food vendors"

  1. Dave Tallen says

    August 26, 2020 at 1:30 pm

    These breweries have enjoyed a unfair advantage by opening up in cheaper industrial parks without having kitchens and now they cry unfair treatment. How do legitimate bars compete with breweries that enjoy less regulations and less costly property to operate?

    Reply
  2. belgianale says

    August 26, 2020 at 8:11 am

    Ohhhhh noooooo now all the people with their crappy microbrews will have to get real, productive jobs and get real personalities ohhhh nooo boohoo
    Beer in america is still garbage

    Reply
    • Laughing says

      August 26, 2020 at 7:34 pm

      I would rather have a crappy microbrewry than people sitting on welfare.
      Priorities.

      Reply
  3. tsparky says

    August 25, 2020 at 4:47 pm

    They just don’t understand that COVID-19 knows you are drinking and eating outdoors in a bar or microbrewery and is therefore much more contagious than drinking and eating outdoors in a restaurant. It’s all about the science.

    Reply
    • Lily says

      August 25, 2020 at 5:07 pm

      You win the gold star, tsparky.

      Reply
      • John Brown says

        August 26, 2020 at 6:28 pm

        Give the racist mayor a chance to fix it, he is in a election.

        Reply
    • [removed] says

      August 25, 2020 at 5:53 pm

      Restaurants are a “vital” business, bars and microbreweries are not. You could have 2 family members quarantined at home with COVID and can’t share a kitchen with them, so you are stuck in a motel or the garage with no microwave or fridge and need to go somewhere to eat and cant afford to use delivery which doubles the price of a one-person meal.

      Heck I could use a drink right now, but there is a virus and we all have to make sacrifices so I guess a 12 pack from the liquor store will have to do.

      Reply
      • Kalifornia Politburo says

        August 26, 2020 at 6:25 am

        Lets open the breweries. You can get a 12 pack of Top Ramen from the grocery store.

        Reply
    • Seriously says

      August 26, 2020 at 1:38 pm

      Probably has something to do with public consumption of alcohol laws. Or some misunderstanding of same.

      Reply

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