Windsor

'What else can we do to stay open?': Windsor restaurant manager feeling defeated over COVID-19 restrictions

The general manager of a Windsor restaurant said she's feeling "defeated" over the return of restrictions on indoor gathering sizes.

Limits on gatherings being re-introduced on Friday as case counts climb

Restaurant manager reacts to upcoming restrictions to indoor dining

55 years ago
Restaurant manager reacts to upcoming restrictions to indoor dining

The general manager of a Windsor restaurant said she's feeling "defeated" over the return of restrictions on indoor gathering sizes.

Climbing COVID-19 case numbers are behind the Windsor-Essex County Health Unit's decision to once again limit gathering sizes. The regulations come into effect Friday.

As of Monday, there were 518 active COVID-19 cases in Windsor-Essex; the health unit reported 187 new cases that day. A Public Health Ontario Daily Epidemiological Summary report showed a 40.7 per cent increase in cases in the region between the weeks of Nov. 20-26, and Nov. 26-Dec. 2, one of the highest case rates in the province.

At Windsor restaurant the Grand Cantina, the restrictions mean occupancy will be capped at 20 people — bars and restaurants are being limited to 50 per cent of their capacity — and bar seating won't be available, general manager Jennifer Pertras said Monday.

"The numbers are high," she said. "They're going to keep being high."

"It's cold and flu season, it's going to keep happening," Pertras said. "All all we can do is keep following the rules, which we are. Everyone is washing their hands a thousand times a shift."

"We never take our masks off. We're wearing safety glasses at the table again. It's just very redundant at this point."

Pertas said she doesn't see the reason for some of the restrictions, given unvaccinated individuals are already not allowed to enter bars and restaurants in Ontario.

"If you don't want to be vaccinated ... that's your choice. [The] government has decided the consequences of that decision is you can't come in here," she said. "If you are, great, let's keep going, let's open the doors, do our jobs. I'm down to keep wearing the mask, but how can I not serve somebody at this bar when we're vaccinated and wearing masks?"

"What else can we do to stay open?"

In an interview Tuesday with CBC Radio's Windsor Morning, Windsor Regional Hospital chief of staff Dr. Wassim Saad said he's not fully on board with the new regional measures. 

Saad said while he understands they are likely to protect healthcare resources, he doesn't think those who are vaccinated and doing their part should face the same limits as others. 

"I just don't think there was enough of an effort to enforce the current rules that we have," he said. 

"Obviously those types of restrictions are meant to protect our healthcare resources i just wish it was done in a more targeted fashion." 

'I'd just rather postpone it'

The new restrictions are also having an impact on live music in the region.

Shawn Bentley, lead vocalist and guitarist with Sarnia band Johnny Deerest, said the band has cancelled an upcoming show at Windsor's Phog Lounge on Dec. 17, as travelling to perform live just isn't feasible under the rules.

"We were bringing another band down from Sarnia, too," Bentley said. "We were bringing down Jacob Barber and the Melody Machine."

The band isn't playing on

3 years ago
Duration 0:31
New capacity limits in bars is forcing the Johnny Deerest band to cancel its upcoming show in Windsor. Band members say it just not worth it.

The new restrictions would limit the audience at the Phog Lounge to about 30 people, Bentley said, adding there are seven members between the two bands.

"We'd be playing for like 20 people," he said. "To drive two, two-and-a-half hours down there with two bands, seven people, play for 20, I'd just rather postpone it until this goes away."

Jennifer Brace, bassist and backup vocalist with Johnny Deerest, said she's worried over whether venues will re-book them in the future.

"I want them to reschedule us," she said. "You worry about that, because we had to cancel."

And then, of course, there are the concerns over catching the virus itself.

"It means isolation once again," Brace said. "Music is our source of many things, be it being in our house listening to records, or going out."

"We just saw the Sadies perform on Saturday night, and it felt really good to be out watching a live band," she said. "Being isolated, it hurts."

"Not being able to perform, not being able to go out and see live music, it's damaging. I really believe that."