Dozens of families flocked to restaurant patios Saturday in Texas town
Dozens of families flocked to restaurant patios Saturday in a small Texas town that decided to reopen some businesses ahead of Gov. Greg Abbott scheduled April 27.
The city of Colleyville was among the first in the country to reopen restaurants – patio dining only – following COVID-19 closures. The move was authorized by a controversial proclamation by Mayor Richard Newton.
Diners can be seen waiting for tables at Gloria’s Latin Cuisine in Colleyville. Several of them are not wearing masks or any form of protective covering. “The wait to be seated at Rio Mambo in Colleyville is currently at 2h45m. People are sitting around in the parking lot pounding cocktails,” posted a fan on Twitter.
The Texas town of Colleyville has a population size of roughly 26,000. As of Saturday, Texas has more than 24,000 cases of the coronavirus almost the size of this town. Colleyville has a small population but it’s surrounded by other towns in the metro that is DFW. It’s not isolated.
Some patrons did sport masks as they waited to be seated and even as they sat at their tables. But masks soon came off once food became available for consumption.
A woman claiming to have eaten at the establishment said that staff did wear masks and gloves while they served customers. However the woman did describe people as being ‘too close’ in the waiting area, adding that they were not six feet apart.
In his announcement to reopen on Friday, Richard Newton included a handful of instructions including;
People can dine at restaurants but only on outdoor patios that have spaced-out tables.
Religious services on-site are no longer prohibited, providing that physical distancing still applies.
He also said that services conducted through remote/virtual methods are encouraged. One-on-one visits to gyms and personal trainers are allowed through appointment only if people wear PPE. Fitness classes can happen with a maximum of 10 students, practicing social distancing.
Retail stores can open if they allow one customer at a time on an appointment-only basis. There is one person per 200 square feet of retail space excluding employees.
‘Hands-on’ services like nail salons, massage parlors or other beauty services are allowed on a ‘one-on-one’ basis and so long as all appointments are contained to one per 200 sq ft.
Newton said he made the decision while he was staring at a collection of empty outdoor restaurant tables while eating take-out food in his car.
‘Why shouldn’t I be able to sit at that table and eat?
‘Most of the businesses in Colleyville are small, locally owned. It’s the smaller guys that are really getting killed. As long as the data supports it, we want to give them the opportunity,’ he told The L.A. Times.
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