Anarchy in Central Park
New York politicians got out of the way for once, and something beautiful happened.
New York politicians got out of the way for once, and something beautiful happened.
Lawyers representing an allegedly duped Buffalo Wild Wings customer demand that the company disgorge its ill-gotten gains.
In an attempt to create a new banquet license, a bill introduced in Utah would require every restaurant to build a wall that blocks off its private party space from the rest of the establishment.
McDonald's invested in some spiffy new toys, but almost everything else stayed the same.
The L.A. City Council saw a good thing happening and decided government wasn't involved enough.
This fiscal irresponsibility throws gasoline on the country's already raging inflation fire.
The city halted its practice of fining graffitied businesses during the pandemic. But now it's firing up its enforcement machine again.
New rules from the state alcohol control board could grind breweries into insolvency.
Atlanta, Sioux Center, and too many other cities and towns are still treating food trucks like second-class businesses.
Regulations ban food sales, limit the number of events, and include other inane requirements.
Hudson Valley foie gras producers are not taking New York City's guff sitting down.
The Restaurant Revitalization Fund Replenishment Act would give restaurants another $42 billion in grants to cover the lingering costs of the pandemic.
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu seems hellbent on making things difficult or impossible for city restaurants.
Detroit leaders throw around words like "fairness" and "equity" while shielding big restaurants from smaller competition.
Soviet rule promised abundance. Instead it brought misery and starvation.
Business owners in the Bronx respond to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s vaccine passport mandate.
Going out in Manhattan the first night patrons were required to prove their vaccination status
Warning people about the dangers of raw meat doesn't require prohibiting the practice.
Plus: Judge rules against Roy Moore in Sacha Baron Cohen lawsuit, federal marijuana legalization bill allegedly arriving soon, and more...
The state, one of the last to fully reopen, lifted some capacity limits early. But the service sector was hamstrung during a heat crisis in which it could have helped.
Theatrical safety checks don't keep people safe—vaccines do.
There's a good chance they haven't been preventing the spread of COVID, and they might even be counterproductive.
For months, the owners of Tin Horn Flats have refused to comply with restrictions on their business.
Do small businesses need another punch in the gut?
Now officials in Chicago and New York are reconsidering their rules.
Garden State lawmakers have unanimously passed two bills now allowing restaurants to keep their outdoor operations running so long as their indoor dining rooms are restricted.
The factory fire was salt in the wound of this struggling iconic New York business.
A year into the pandemic, politicians still have not digested the dangers of careless public health measures.
The evidence is limited and mixed, but data from New York, Minnesota, and California suggest that restaurants there account for a small share of infections.
The decision says the government failed to present any evidence of virus transmission in restaurants that follow COVID-19 precautions.
New York quickly reversed its ludicrous bathroom ban following backlash from the hospitality industry and anyone with a little common sense.
The new law layers more bureaucratic requirements on a hospitality industry trying to bounce back from its worst year on record.
The order is killing businesses and isn't rooted in science.
The ban is "not a comment on the relative safety of outdoor dining," Mark Ghaly says, but part of the effort to keep people from leaving home.
Using police to forcefully shut down Mac's Public House is a violation of liberty and a waste of resources.
Job losses and business closures loom as more cities and states once again shut down their hospitality industries.
Who could have predicted that intolerable rules won’t be tolerated?
Restaurants in five counties are threatening legal action.
Limiting the hours during which food can be served is arbitrary, unscientific, and could cause overcrowding, the plaintiffs argue.
New York City restaurants have been excluded from the reopening of dining rooms in the rest of the state.
Public officials are routinely undermining the legitimacy of coronavirus countermeasures by ignoring their own (often arbitrary) rules.
Drinking outside would be OK if the government considered you an adult.
In the face of the greatest challenge in generations, America's chefs, bartenders, and restaurant owners are reinventing their food, their businesses, and themselves.
The New York governor requires bars to sell "substantive" offerings if they'd like to stay open.
Data from Yelp shows that the long-term economic toll of the coronavirus pandemic is only starting to be realized. And federal unemployment data shows layoffs are climbing again.
Phase 4 of city's reopening means loose rules for zoos but strict requirements for bars.