I'm guessing there's been a lot of pressure by restaurants, who invested a lot in outdoor seating (?). I'm not sure eating outdoors causes more infections or not.
First of all, feather, welcome! Glad you decided to join us!
The above confounds me. We have the restaurants out here in the Valley that have put up huge tents and are operating as "outside" dining rooms. And they have customers! Meanwhile, it seems to me that the minute you enclose the space you've eliminated the air flow that provides whatever protection from virus transmission there was in a gathering spot.
My own family has only eaten out 3 or 4 times since the lockdowns started. ...and we used to eat out once or twice a week in our past life! When we do we drive a bit to a Mexican restaurant that has 3 different patios that are not enclosed. AND we only go during the week at an earlier time when the number of other patrons will be as low as possible.
Beyond that, we get take out in an effort to support our favorite places. Naturally, we'd like to see them survive until this is over. One of them, a Mediterranean spot, only opened in the 6 months before Covid hit. It's small and though their food and service are VERY good, they hadn't had the time to develop a client base they could rely on. We are constantly worried that they'll have to throw in the towel but, thank god, they haven't yet.
And my e-mail is full of offers from local spots every day. It must be very very tough for them.
As for the partiers, there are 2 houses here where there's always a party going on. One directly behind me. One directly on my side. The guy behind me does hair and he's been operating out of his house since the lockdown started. He's turned it into a social affair with at least half a dozen people hanging out every weekend. The other folks have 4 pre-school and elementary school age children and a big extended family. They just seem to have birthdays and holiday celebrations all the time.
We have half acre lots. Enough space that I don't worry about it but it does seem to violate the spirit of what we should be doing to protect one another. In more congested neighborhoods I can see that it would be a real
problem.
Thanks for all of the real time info, I feel like that is much more reliable than any news stories
It's a conundrum. We hear things
we can't understand. We have our anecdotal stories of our own experiences, of course, but we don't necessarily have the big picture. We need to rely on news services for that. Sometimes they offer insight. Sometimes they don't and just leave us with data that may or may not be explicable without context.
I think one of the things that accounts for the migration out of CA is young people who can't afford to buy homes in the areas where they grew up. My daughter's family is a case in point. They're trying very hard to find something affordable within commuting distance to my grandson's school. He's 10yo and he's been in 3 schools since pre-school. The one he's at now is a really good fit and they want that for him. But "starter" homes in the area fo the school begin around $700-$800K and that's just beyond them.
As a result, many people their age in their circumstances look for more affordable out of state opportunities. My s-i-l, however, is in TV production and, consequently, he's tied to LA. Plus, they'd be leaving behind ALL the people in both their families of origin for some place where they have no connections and no support.
It was a tough situation before Covid. Like many other things, it's worse now.