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University area restaurant owners react to Minneapolis vaccine mandate

The mandate requires all food and drink establishments to have customers show proof of full vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test.
Als+Breakfast+in+Dinkytown+Minneapolis+displays+a+sign+asking+customers+to+show+proof+of+vaccination+or+a+negative+COVID+test+in+order+to+dine+in.+This+is+a+result+of+the+new+mandate+in+Minneapolis+for+bars+and+restaurants.
Image by Alice Bennett
Al’s Breakfast in Dinkytown Minneapolis displays a sign asking customers to show proof of vaccination or a negative COVID test in order to dine in. This is a result of the new mandate in Minneapolis for bars and restaurants.

On Jan. 19, Minneapolis enacted a mandate requiring businesses to ask customers for proof of COVID-19 vaccination or a negative test when entering the establishment, frustrating some business owners in Minneapolis.

While the city is taking these steps to slow the high COVID-19 transmission brought on by Omicron, some restaurant owners feel the mandate may drive out customers and slow down business.

Mayor Jacob Frey signed the vaccine mandate as an emergency order on Jan. 12 and has no official end date as of publication. It requires all food and drink establishments, including restaurants and event venues, to ask customers for proof of full vaccination status or a negative COVID-19 test in order to enter the establishments. Negative tests must be taken within three days of entering the business and must be a PCR or antigen test. Venues holding ticketed events will also be required to follow the mandate starting Jan. 26.

“One of the reasons why we went with a vaccine requirement in these particular establishments is because there really is no feasible way to have protection from a mask because you’re eating and drinking,” said Heidi Ritchie, the Minneapolis interim health commissioner.

Ritchie said that businesses failing to comply will be enforced with a warning letter, administrative citations, adverse license reaction or misdemeanor prosecution.

“The approach we take is one of outreach and education,” Ritchie said. “We really want businesses to comply.”

Joshua Hedquist, founder of Joey Meatballs which has a location in Malcolm Yards, said he was frustrated with the mandate because it has made business slower.

“It puts people with small businesses in a tough spot. We want to pay our employees, we don’t want to get rid of them,” Hedquist said. “But then when the money isn’t coming in, if the business closes or you have to cut labor, there’s no win in that scenario.”

Russom Solomon, owner of The Red Sea, an Ethiopian bar and restaurant on the West Bank, said while he understands why the city has implemented the mandate, it adds another barrier, on top of the pandemic and cold weather, for people to come into restaurants.

Ritchie said that the decision was influenced by research from other cities, such as New York City and Chicago, with similar mandates. Minneapolis also conducted outreach work to hear from businesses across demographics before moving forward with the mandate.

“There are some businesses that feel that this is just a burden on them,” said Ritchie. “[The mandate] levels the playing field a little bit because it’s a requirement for all businesses versus just some that are doing it and some that aren’t, so it helps them.”

Not everyone feels like it’s helping their business, especially as a group of restaurant owners attempt to sue Minneapolis over the vaccine mandate.

“All of us business owners, especially restaurant and bar owners are sitting there going, ‘Alright, how do we move forward with this and what’s this going to do to our sales?’” said Kent Kramp, vice president of the Dinkytown Business Alliance and owner of Raising Cane’s Chicken Fingers in Dinkytown.

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  • A Gopher
    Jan 30, 2022 at 10:28 am

    At a drastically reduced rate compared to unvaccinated. Global vaccination leads to global eradication, see polio and smallpox for proof of this phenomenon. People who willingly remained unvaccinated allowed the virus enough replication cycles to evolve past the original rock solid immunity. If you hate mandates then get your vaccines so the virus dies sooner next time!

  • Matthew
    Jan 30, 2022 at 8:23 am

    1) Vaccination reduces the severity and duration of infection which reduces the severity and duration of infectiousness too.

    2) A city requirement lets the city be the ‘bad guy’ rather than each business owner having to make this decision which, no matter their choice, will anger customers.

  • CapnRusty
    Jan 29, 2022 at 7:05 pm

    Hate to harsh your mellow, dude, but you are aware, are you not, that people who have been vaccinated can still spread Covid?

  • A Gopher
    Jan 29, 2022 at 6:13 pm

    I think this is a ham-handed attempt to slow the spread. Really, everyone should have just gotten vaccinated a year ago and not given the virus so many more chances to evolve.

  • A Gopher
    Jan 29, 2022 at 6:12 pm

    So if the vaccine makes you less sick = fewer viral particles = less chances of making someone else ill, right! Being vaccinated and boosted does both reduce your likelihood of getting sick and reduces your ability to replicate and spread the virus.

  • A Gopher
    Jan 29, 2022 at 6:11 pm

    Being vaccinated and boosted does both reduce your likelihood of getting sick and reduces your ability to replicate and spread the virus.

  • Minnwise
    Jan 29, 2022 at 5:17 am

    How does one being vaccinated affect anyone else? It doesn’t keep one from getting sick and spreading it around, it only keeps one from getting as ill as they otherwise would have.
    So what difference does this mandate have on vaccinated persons other then possibly shutting down their favorite place to go to?

  • Minnwise
    Jan 29, 2022 at 5:13 am

    How is this going to help slow the pandemic?
    The answer is: nothing.
    The only thing the vaccine does is reduce how sick people get. It does not stop one from catching the virus, or spreading it. If anything it does the opposite because in keeping people from having symptoms, they’re out there walking around exposing everyone they encounter having no clue they’re assymptomatic and spreading it around.
    The only thing this mandate does is punish the unvaccinated, and harm businesses, kicking them when they are already down, so much so that even more will end up permanently closed. It will have no effect on the spread of the virus outside of closing businesses so that people can no longer be under the same roof there.
    Again, the vaccine does not keep people from catching or spreading the virus. There is no logical purpose to this mandate except to control people.

  • CapnRusty
    Jan 28, 2022 at 12:39 pm

    How about letting the customers decide whether they want to take the risk of entering a restaurant in which patrons are admitted who haven’t been vaccinated? Vaccinated people can transmit the virus, even if they don’t get it themselves. But you knew that, didn’t you?

  • Nicole
    Jan 28, 2022 at 11:42 am

    The restaurants really need to understand the pandemic is NOT OVER. They are lucky to be open at all with what’s going on. That said, there should be financial support along with the mandates.

  • Brian Bergman
    Jan 28, 2022 at 11:03 am

    Not one of these restaurants even mentions concern for the health of their customers. Why would you even want to eat there, then? I wouldn’t trust their food.