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NYC Restaurateurs Secure Temporary Landlord Protections Until April 2021

Plus, New York’s $50 omakase strawberry has returned — and more intel

Daily Life In New York City Amid Coronavirus Outbreak Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images

City Council votes to extend a measure that protects restaurant owners who violate their leases

Renewed protections for restaurant and bar owners are on the way. On Wednesday, City Council voted to extend a measure that protects restaurant and bar owners who have not been able to pay their rent or have otherwise violated their leases due to the coronavirus pandemic. The new bill is an extension of measures originally put in place by the Council in May, which suspended the enforcement of personal liability clauses in restaurant leases and prevented commercial landlords from going after a tenant’s personal assets — including their homes and life savings — in the event of a rent default. Those protections, previously set to expire on September 30, are now extended until March 31, 2021.

In May, the City Council passed a slew of temporary coronavirus relief measures, including a cap on third-party delivery app fees, the elimination of sidewalk licensing fees, and a suspension of personal liability clauses in restaurant leases. Yet similar to New York City’s takeout cocktail or outdoor dining programs, those policies have a baked-in expiration date — and in the case of personal liability clauses, expiration could spell doom for restaurants and bars across the city, close to 90 percent of which were not able to pay full rent in August.

Earlier in the pandemic, Andrew Rigie, executive director of the NYC Hospitality Alliance, said that if the personal liability clause were to expire, a “massive wave” of restaurant closures would likely ensue. In a letter to City Council in April, restaurateur Gabriel Stulman wrote that the bill was the only thing separating him from going “bankrupt and belly up.” While the new bill does not exempt restaurant owners from previously unpaid rent, it does give them a shot at paying back those sums before the provision expires in six months.

In other news

— The city’s $50 omakase strawberries have returned. Oishii Berry will be hosting a sake and strawberry tasting at Brooklyn Kura’s Industry City taproom this Sunday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. The new menu item, which includes one strawberry and a glass of sake, costs $20.

— A new roaming grocery store will call Williamsburg its home next month. The aptly named Pop-Up Grocer will sell specialty snack brands from a storefront at 111 N. Fifth Street, near Berry Street, from October 2 to November 1.

— White Horse Tavern, which had its liquor license suspended in July after repeated social distancing violations, is now back open.

— A new Brooklyn-based food company is selling natto, the Japanese fermented soybean dish, for home delivery and nationwide shipping.

— Gothamist finds the sausage dishes at the newly opened Cozy Royale in Williamsburg to be “very good.”

10 thoughts every New Yorker has while dining outside right now, according to Time Out.

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