Restaurants, hotels call for reopening plan
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[February 19, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Officials from the hotel,
restaurant and convention industries told a state Senate panel Thursday
that they need a clear plan for how they will be allowed to reopen as
the COVID-19 pandemic wanes, warning that without such a plan, many will
go out of business permanently.
“We need to know … a strategy, we need to know the metrics as we move
forward because we cannot, we cannot lose another summer here in the
state of Illinois,” Sam Toia, president and CEO of the Illinois
Restaurant Association, told the state Senate’s newly-formed Tourism and
Hospitality Committee during its first virtual hearing.
The committee was set up this year by Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak
Park, because the state’s tourism industry has been among the hardest
hit by the pandemic.
Currently, all regions of the state are under Phase 4 mitigations, which
limits private gatherings to no more than 50 people. But Toia argued
that many restaurants are capable of handling larger numbers of people
safely, and he said there should be a more specific plan that would
allow bars, restaurants and hotels to gradually move out of Phase 4
toward Phase 5, which is full reopening.
“We just want to know when we can go back to having conventions, having
parties, private parties, figuring out when we can have some fans in
stadiums. This is very, very unclear,” he said. “And we just want to get
adjusted of what Phase 5 is going to look like. I don't think we can
wait 12 to 18 months.”
Michael Jacobson, president and CEO of the Illinois Hotel and Lodging
Association, agreed, saying that without such a plan, hotels risk losing
not just another season, but another year.
“What our industry needs is clarity,” he said. “Meeting planners are
making their plans right now for events booked this summer and beyond. …
Because of how long these planners book in advance, we cannot take a
day-by-day approach to these restrictions. Otherwise, we are putting
months and months of future business at risk of leaving our state. And
once a meeting leaves Illinois, it becomes so much harder to convince
that organizer to come back to our state.”
Jacobson said the statewide average occupancy rate for hotels in
Illinois in December was only 27 percent, roughly half what it was a
year earlier. That compared to a nationwide average occupancy rate of 37
percent.
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Sam Toia, who heads the Illinois Restaurant
Association, argues for a more flexible reopening plan for
restaurant and tourism industries during a virtual meeting of the
Senate Tourism and Hospitality Committee. (Credit:
Blueroomstream.com)
During a one-week period in January, he said, the occupancy rate
among Chicago hotels was down 84 percent from a comparable week in
2019.
Toia and Jacobson both noted that other states are adopting plans
that allow for a more gradual reopening of businesses with larger
and larger group limits. Both also argued that workers in those
industries should be prioritized for vaccinations.
According to the “Restore Illinois” reopening plan, the state can
only move into Phase 5 when “testing, tracing and treatment are
widely available throughout the state. Either a vaccine is developed
to prevent additional spread of COVID-19, a treatment option is
readily available that ensures health care capacity is no longer a
concern, or there are no new cases over a sustained period.”
Toia and Jacobson argued that with vaccines now in distribution and
the spread of the disease greatly slowed, it’s time for the
administration to start making more specific plans for how and when
the state can transition to Phase 5. The state’s rolling seven-day
case positivity rate on Thursday was 2.7 percent, the lowest it’s
been since early July.
Sen. Terri Bryant, R-Murphysboro, noted that following a Senate
Health Committee meeting earlier this week, Republicans sent a
letter to Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi
Ezike asking her to specify what constitutes “widely available” and
“a sustained period.”
Committee Chairwoman Sara Feigenholtz, D-Chicago, said the committee
would review that letter and any response the administration
provides.
“Our goal is to meet and construct a safe plan to get tourists into
hotels, restaurants and our cultural institutions,” Feigenholtz said
in a statement after the meeting. “There is a path to do this
safely, and Illinois must look at the modeling and metrics of other
states in order to kick-start a struggling industry.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |