'Tell us what we're supposed to do': Restaurants plead for clarity as shutdown goes on - Action News
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Ottawa

'Tell us what we're supposed to do': Restaurants plead for clarity as shutdown goes on

Restaurants are up against constantly changing rules that either partiallyor completelyrestrict indoor dining. They say they're doing what they can to followby the rules if only they could figure out what they are day-to-day.

Say lack of directions, not COVID-19 fines, the biggest issue

Ottawa restaurant founder calling for clearer rules during pandemic

4 years ago
Duration 1:05
Craig Buckley, founder of Kettlemans Bagel Co., says the city needs to provide clear guidelines for businesses who are trying to stay open during the pandemic.

Athon Varvaresos thought he'd done everything right.

He bought a tent to extend the patio season at Corner Bar and Grill in Orlans, and spent another $2,000 to have three outdoor natural gas heaters installed not "a small sum of money," he said.

Then last week, an inspector from theTechnical Standards and Safety Authority (TSSA) arrived and told him his heaters aren't allowed within a partially enclosed tent.

"Everybody's been talking about extending patioseason for months now," said Varvaresos, who wasn't fined but is now renting new heaters at a cost of $1,000 per month.

"Where were all these people? Then they show up unannounced and give no solutions to oursituation, other than you need to shut it down."

Athon Varvaresos, owner of Corner Bar and Grill in Ottawa's east end, had his gas-powered heater shut off by a TSSA inspector. He says he would have liked more information on the regulations before he spent $2,000. (Simon Gohier/CBC)

Another seven restaurants in and around Ottawa were also visited by TSSA inspectors over non-complying heaters, according to a spokeswoman for the provincial regulatory agency.

Under provincial rules, a patio tent has to have two walls open to allow ventilation. But when it comes to fuel-fired heaters, that tent area even with the two flaps up isn't considered an outdoor space.

But what Varvaresos and other restaurant owners are upset about isn't so much that they were discovered breaking the rules it's that they can't keep up with them.

'Fending for ourselves'

The hospitality industry has been hit hard by the pandemic. Restaurants are up against constantly changing rules that either partially or completelyrestrict indoor dining. They've tried to expand takeout and patio service tokeep afloat.

Some are closing their doors. Others, like Varvaresos, are doing what they can to followby the rules. But theysay there isn't a one-stop shop that brings together provincial orders, local bylaws and other regulations.

Craig Buckley is the owner of Kettleman's Bagels. He says the city has failed to provide restaurants clear directions on how they can operate during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

Kettleman's Bagels owner Craig Buckley laysthe blame squarely at the city's feet.

"Jim Watson, as the mayor of Ottawa, has shown no leadership," Buckley said. "The restaurants are basically fending for ourselves."

At least tell us what we're supposed to do.- Craig Buckley

The mayor disagrees. The city has waived various fees associated with patios, and he's rightly pointedout that it was the province that ordered restaurants closed on the Friday before the Thanksgiving weekend, not the city.

Watson said he's trying to get them reopened before the end of the 28-day restriction period. He alsostands by the bylaw department'senforcement of the rules, especially over patio enclosures.

"Listen, people can blame me all they want," he told reporters after Wednesday's council meeting. "But at the end of the day, the responsibility is up to the individual owner of that restaurant to ensure that he or she and their employees and customers are not put in further danger."

Kettleman's was one of eight restaurants fined $880 for a tent infraction just days afterindoor dining was banned on Oct. 9.

Buckley said it's not the fine that bothers him, but the fact there's no one to tell him precisely which of his doors need to stay open.

"We care very much about our team and about our guests. So we want to make sure everybody's protected,"said Buckley. "But at least tell us what we're supposed to do."

Ottawa restaurant industry looking pretty grim as cold weather sets in

4 years ago
Duration 0:50
Nathalie Carrier, executive director of the Vanier BIA, says restaurant closures deal a big blow to the local economy and represent far more than the loss of just a place to eat.

'A communications challenge': city GM

The city has tried to gather together rules and regulations for restaurants and bars online, but the head of the economic development department recognizes it's been a struggle to keep up with the changes to the industry.

"There's absolutely a communications challenge right now," said Stephen Willis, the city's general manager of planning, infrastructure and economic development.

"It's because things are moving as fast as they are, and also because the city did not have advance warning of what the province's intentions were We found out when they did, and we've been scrambling to put information on our website."

Stephen Willis, the city's general manager of planning, infrastructure and economic development, recognizes that communicating the rules from various levels of government to individual restaurants is a challenge. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

And the city is learning about new regulations itself like thosearound fuel-fired heaters. Safety rules for propane and gas heatershave always existed, but restaurants are using them in different ways for the first time this season. And it wasn't until late Septemberthat the TSSAbegan making proactive educationvisits to restaurants, weeks after they'd already purchased their equipment.

The city is working with organizations likethe Ottawa Board of Trade and local business associations to try to share information, although Willis realizes that the details don't always trickle down to individual owners scrambling to survive.

The quickest way for a business owner to speak with a real person, he said,is to call 311.

Enforcement discretionary

Then there's the enforcement of the rules a touchy subject all around.

Roger Chapman, the city's director of bylaw and regulatory service, sayshis officers are in a difficult position. Most of the time, officers are responding to complaints they aren't going out looking for rule-breakers.

And while some may think bylaw is being too hard on businesses, Chapman said others believe they aren't doing enough.

"We live in these communities, we visit these restaurants, and it's tough," said Chapman.

Restaurant owners say they know enforcement officers have a job to do, but given their dire circumstances, they'dlike more specific directions.

The patch on a bylaw officers jacket can be seen.
Some restaurant owners say they'd like bylaw officers to write out official warnings spelling out exactly what they are doing wrong. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

For example, Chapman told CBC that bylaw gave Kettleman's a warning about its outdoor seating last July, but Buckley said he doesn't know anything about that.

Buckley and other restaurant owners told CBC they'dprefera written warning something Chapman says is up to the discretion of individual bylaw officers with exact details of the problem.

"I make bagels.I'm not an infectious disease expert," said Buckley. "I go by with whatever the experts tell us to do, and I and all the restaurateurs want to abide by the law."

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