LOUISVILLE, Ky. ā People are eating out more, and Bearnoās co-owner George Timmering is reaping the rewards.
āWeāre getting very close to being back where we were, from a sales perspective, before COVID,ā Timmering said. āBut I think once everything is in place and the staffing is there, we might be doing better.ā
What You Need To Know
- Bars and restaurants can now operate at 75% capacity
- The curfew has been lifted for all businesses
- Some restaurant owners are having a hard time finding workers, limiting their ability to stay open later
- Most coronavirus restrictions will be lifted in Kentucky on June 11
Friday was the first day he and other restaurant owners could operate at 75% capacity, a boost from the previous 60%.
There are also fewer social distancing requirements for bars and restaurants and no more curfew.
āWeāre excited about it,ā Timmering said. āItās moving forward, getting back closer to normalcy.ā
Over the last few months, as more and more people got vaccinated against the coronavirus and case numbers dropped, Timmering said he noticed a significant uptick in customers.
āIn the hours that weāre operating, dinner time on the weekends, weāre at full [60%] capacity,ā Timmering said. āSo we are seeing a lot of demand and whatnot so weāre using every table we have on Friday and Saturday nights.ā
Bearnoās used to be open later before the pandemic, but Timmering said he needs more staff if heās going to extend his current hours.
āI hate to say this: weāre turning down revenue right now because of the lack of staffing,ā he said. "So as we get more people, more staffing, then weāll be able to extend our hours.ā
Stacy Roof with the Kentucky Restaurant Association said staffing is a common issue right now.
āThe good thing about our industry is there are plenty of positions available in a lot of different formats; front of house, back of house,ā Roof said. āThereās a lot of flexibility there.ā
Roof doesnāt expect the staffing shortage to last much longer, and Timmering said more people have been applying since the Kentucky Derby.
āThatās helped quite a bit; given us a little bit of breathing room,ā he said. āWeāre still not quite where we want to be at full staffing, but things have improved a lot in the month of May.ā
And given what the last year has been like, heās not worried about this kind of problem.
āWhere we were even a few months ago, weāre in a totally better place now,ā Timmering said. āAnd these issues and challenges weāre having are good because itās about handling more and more business.ā
Gov. Andy Beshear plans to remove most coronavirus restrictions, including capacity limits and the mask mandate, on June 11. The mask mandate has already been lifted for vaccinated people, although businesses can still enforce their own rules.