Rule-breaking Long Beach LA Restaurant Restauration became their pandemic nightmare

LONG BEACH, California – Vivian Hurtado and Mica Randall tried to stay out of it.

It had been two months since Los Angeles County banned on-site dining to stop a record-breaking wave of coronavirus hospitalizations. But the couple – Hurtado a vet assistant, Randall a contractor – knew that the trendy restaurant directly behind their apartment continued to receive customers on the back patio anyway. They thought Restauration was just doing what it was supposed to do.

Dana Tanner, the outwardly charming owner and face of the place, has consistently said that keeping her patio open is a matter of her employees’ survival. But like so many coronavirus villains in the past year, she also seemed to embrace the notoriety that comes with defying public health orders during a pandemic. For New Year’s Eve, when ICU capacity in Los Angeles County was 0 percent, Restauration advertised a personalized patio dinner – then doubled down when a local news organization asked for it.

Long Beach City Health Department ordered the restaurant to close a week later for violating coronavirus rules. Not long after, Tanner invited restaurateurs and journalists to return to her patio for a meeting where she urged others to follow her example. “It is wrong for us to be shut down and discriminated against,” Tanner told other entrepreneurs in an interview with The Daily Beast.

Finally, on Jan. 23, city airlines showed up in the middle of Saturday brunch and cut the restaurant’s gas. But if it was a genuine effort to stop Tanner’s antics, it was not a successful one, but sparked an increasingly bizarre series of events showing how California corporations write their own public safety rules during COVID-19. crisis.

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