New Delhi: The government, in a long anticipated move, has given restaurants the nod to open their doors but many owners say the cap on the number of customers will make their operations unviable and it may be better to stay closed.
Indicating that dining out might still be some distance away and home deliveries will continue to be the order of the day, restaurateurs said the Health Ministry's standard operating procedures (SOPs) don't make economic sense as the cash strapped industry ventures out of the extended lockdown and plans its future.
The Health Ministry issued a set of SOPs on Thursday, curtailing the seating capacity to 50 per cent when restaurants open next week in accordance with an earlier order of the Home Ministry.
Citing social distancing norms, the SOPs also mandate a distance of at least six feet in queues and inside restaurants.
Asking restaurants to encourage takeaways instead of dine-ins, it says only asymptomatic staff are allowed to work and entrances to all properties must have sanitiser dispensers and thermal screening provisions.
Accepting the need for most of the other restrictions, industry insiders said halving the seating capacity is just not feasible.
The SOPs are even more detrimental than the extended lockdown, which started on March 25, said Priyank Sukhija, the owner of restaurant chains such as Plum By Bent Chair, Lord of the Drinks and Tamasha in Delhi and Mumbai.
With a 50 per cent seating limit, about 80 per cent of restaurants will not make money even when they open up later because managing rental costs, staff salaries and electricity bills won't be possible, Sukhija told PTI, adding that he is glad his restaurants will remain closed.
He pays an average rent of Rs 12 lakh a month for each of his large-scale restaurants.
Sukhija said the Delhi government, like in Gurgaon, should allow them to use their terraces and open spaces.
If you want 50 per cent capacity and want people to space out, the government should let the restaurants use their own terraces, or they should provide public land. They need to come out with a policy like that, because this is more detrimental than the lockdown, Sukhija said.
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The set of regulations currently applicable have been derived from two government orders the June 4 SOPs and the Ministry of Home Affairs order of May 30, which allowed restaurants to open from June 8 but limited their operations beyond 9 pm. It also noted that bars were to remain closed.
The restaurant sector may have incurred revenue losses of over Rs 80,000 crore in the two-and-a-half months of lockdown, estimates National Restaurant Association of India (NRAI) president Anurag Katriar.
The Indian restaurant industry employed 7.3 million people in 2018-19, according to the NRAI India Food Services Report 2019.
It's not just about the seating, Katriar said.
As far as seating is concerned, the SOP mentions only two things 50 per cent capacity and six feet distance. But restaurants are of different shapes and sizes. Now, a restaurant that is 10 ft wide and 15 ft in length, won't be able to accommodate more than two tables, he explained.
However, he described the new set of guidelines as a logical move in the right direction.