Interesting or not
Comments
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My wife's nail salon did the same. Laid everyone off and family only work theretheknowledge said:
The smaller restaurants or eateries I frequent tell me that they are hanging on with take out. The 25% is just a little extra to help get by. The wait staff is gone. I'm being helped at my seat or cash register by the owner or someone in their family. This just applies to the places still open. Many are gone now.PurpleThrobber said:
There's not a chance in hell a restaurant can break even at 25% capacity.dflea said:
This is why restaurants being allowed to open at 25% capacity is like keeping them closed. Every fixed cost you have is tough to cover with only 25% of your revenue.RaceBannon said:
We decided last July that it was stupid to stay open and light money on fire. There is a lot of that I am sure.greenblood said:There's also that transition period. A lot of these businesses are going to hoard money for at least a year or two, until they are certain that COVID is behind us. It's going to drop, and it's going to drop hard. And it's going to largely effect the consumer sector
There is a minimum threshold of business on the books that makes it worthwhile to open.
Not to mention the rules now in place to go anywhere and do anything. Very cumbersome
I'm glad I'm not in the food service bidness.
Maybe a weiner cart.
H'eh h'eh h'eh...weiner.
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It is bad, lots of shops foldedtheknowledge said:
The smaller restaurants or eateries I frequent tell me that they are hanging on with take out. The 25% is just a little extra to help get by. The wait staff is gone. I'm being helped at my seat or cash register by the owner or someone in their family. This just applies to the places still open. Many are gone now.PurpleThrobber said:
There's not a chance in hell a restaurant can break even at 25% capacity.dflea said:
This is why restaurants being allowed to open at 25% capacity is like keeping them closed. Every fixed cost you have is tough to cover with only 25% of your revenue.RaceBannon said:
We decided last July that it was stupid to stay open and light money on fire. There is a lot of that I am sure.greenblood said:There's also that transition period. A lot of these businesses are going to hoard money for at least a year or two, until they are certain that COVID is behind us. It's going to drop, and it's going to drop hard. And it's going to largely effect the consumer sector
There is a minimum threshold of business on the books that makes it worthwhile to open.
Not to mention the rules now in place to go anywhere and do anything. Very cumbersome
I'm glad I'm not in the food service bidness.
Maybe a weiner cart.
H'eh h'eh h'eh...weiner. -
I've personally kept Shakeys afloat
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I drive to Union Gap twice a month to buy crab legs at the last Sea Galley in the state. It will not die on my watch damnit!RaceBannon said:I've personally kept Shakeys afloat
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dflea said:
This is why restaurants being allowed to open at 25% capacity is like keeping them closed. Every fixed cost you have is tough to cover with only 25% of your revenue.RaceBannon said:
We decided last July that it was stupid to stay open and light money on fire. There is a lot of that I am sure.greenblood said:There's also that transition period. A lot of these businesses are going to hoard money for at least a year or two, until they are certain that COVID is behind us. It's going to drop, and it's going to drop hard. And it's going to largely effect the consumer sector
There is a minimum threshold of business on the books that makes it worthwhile to open.
Not to mention the rules now in place to go anywhere and do anything. Very cumbersome
I'm glad I'm not in the food service bidness.
None of the restaurants are adhering to this shit. The ones I've been in have been fullish -
RaceBannon said:
My wife's nail salon did the same. Laid everyone off and family only work theretheknowledge said:
The smaller restaurants or eateries I frequent tell me that they are hanging on with take out. The 25% is just a little extra to help get by. The wait staff is gone. I'm being helped at my seat or cash register by the owner or someone in their family. This just applies to the places still open. Many are gone now.PurpleThrobber said:
There's not a chance in hell a restaurant can break even at 25% capacity.dflea said:
This is why restaurants being allowed to open at 25% capacity is like keeping them closed. Every fixed cost you have is tough to cover with only 25% of your revenue.RaceBannon said:
We decided last July that it was stupid to stay open and light money on fire. There is a lot of that I am sure.greenblood said:There's also that transition period. A lot of these businesses are going to hoard money for at least a year or two, until they are certain that COVID is behind us. It's going to drop, and it's going to drop hard. And it's going to largely effect the consumer sector
There is a minimum threshold of business on the books that makes it worthwhile to open.
Not to mention the rules now in place to go anywhere and do anything. Very cumbersome
I'm glad I'm not in the food service bidness.
Maybe a weiner cart.
H'eh h'eh h'eh...weiner.
Have spent many drunken nights there. Good eats and stiff drinks.theknowledge said:
I drive to Union Gap twice a month to buy crab legs at the last Sea Galley in the state. It will not die on my watch damnit!RaceBannon said:I've personally kept Shakeys afloat
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Who would have known stay at home orders are good for 5G
And OBKs shitpoasting -
It’s artLoneStarDawg said:Who would have known stay at home orders are good for 5G
And OBKs shitpoasting -
A man's got to do what a man's got to do.PostGameOrangeSlices said:dflea said:
This is why restaurants being allowed to open at 25% capacity is like keeping them closed. Every fixed cost you have is tough to cover with only 25% of your revenue.RaceBannon said:
We decided last July that it was stupid to stay open and light money on fire. There is a lot of that I am sure.greenblood said:There's also that transition period. A lot of these businesses are going to hoard money for at least a year or two, until they are certain that COVID is behind us. It's going to drop, and it's going to drop hard. And it's going to largely effect the consumer sector
There is a minimum threshold of business on the books that makes it worthwhile to open.
Not to mention the rules now in place to go anywhere and do anything. Very cumbersome
I'm glad I'm not in the food service bidness.
None of the restaurants are adhering to this shit. The ones I've been in have been fullish
I wouldn't go on TV and tell everyone, though. -
@PostGameOrangeSlices woulddflea said:
A man's got to do what a man's got to do.PostGameOrangeSlices said:dflea said:
This is why restaurants being allowed to open at 25% capacity is like keeping them closed. Every fixed cost you have is tough to cover with only 25% of your revenue.RaceBannon said:
We decided last July that it was stupid to stay open and light money on fire. There is a lot of that I am sure.greenblood said:There's also that transition period. A lot of these businesses are going to hoard money for at least a year or two, until they are certain that COVID is behind us. It's going to drop, and it's going to drop hard. And it's going to largely effect the consumer sector
There is a minimum threshold of business on the books that makes it worthwhile to open.
Not to mention the rules now in place to go anywhere and do anything. Very cumbersome
I'm glad I'm not in the food service bidness.
Noone of the restaurants are adhering to this shit. The ones I've been in have been fullish
I wouldn't go on TV and tell everyone, though.






