What are the new rules for pubs and restaurants?



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What are the new rules for restaurants and pubs?

This week another rule was added to the ever-growing list of regulations for pubs and restaurants during the Covid-19 pandemic. They must now keep records of the food they serve customers for 28 days and make them available to gardaí when requested.

Under Statutory Instrument 326, businesses must “make a record of the substantial meal or meals ordered … for each member of a group of persons and each person who is permitted, or granted, access to the installations …”

This stems from regulations introduced in mid-August that require a limit of six people per table, the provision of hand sanitizer stations around the premises, and the use of masks by customers when they are not seated.

What is the logic behind the new rule?

With no end in sight to the pandemic, there is concern among health officials that people are becoming increasingly fatigued with restrictions around socializing, particularly the mandatory € 9 meal that must be ordered with alcohol. Although gardaí says that compliance is still high, in the last month it has detected 74 pubs in breach of the regulations.

Regular inspections of pubs across the country by the gardaí continue, but require a lot of resources. Officials believe that forcing pubs to keep records of receipts will encourage compliance with the rules and make it easier for gardaí to catch violators. Health Minister Stephen Donnelly has said the measures are designed to make pubs “circumvent” existing rules.

How will the new rules affect me?

They probably won’t, unless you own a pub or restaurant. The rules are designed to enforce compliance at the company, not the customer.

“The Government does not care if you had a cup of coffee or a dessert, or if you went for the banoffee or, as a tavern keeper asked me last night, if you went for the garlic sauce or the pepper sauce”, Minister of Additional Education and superior, said Simon Harris.

“What it’s about is basically a bit of common sense that prevails here, the reality is that, as of today, the law is that it can only be opened if food is also served.”

Of course, the new rule could make your local pub more insistent on ordering that € 9 toast along with your pint. On the positive side, another part of the legal instrument extends the pub’s opening hours until 11:30 p.m.

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