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Miami-Dade restaurant patrons applaud resumption of indoor dining

WFOR

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    WEST MIAMI-DADE, FL (WFOR) — Many Beleagured restaurant owners in Miami-Dade are welcoming a return to indoor dining for the first time since early July and said they hope they can survive economically amid the new restrictions.

Ely Acosta Ana said her family’s business of 46 years had been planning to shut down until a sudden surge of customers at the iconic Rio Cristal restaurant at 99th Avenue and Bird Road in West Miami-Dade.

“At first being back here was a bit weird after being shut down for indoor dining for so long but now it is pretty exciting,” she told CBS4’s Peter D’Oench

Acosta Ana said her restaurant faced many hurdles after indoor dining was banned from March until May because of the coronavirus pandemic and then banned again in early July.

“The first closure really affected us,” she said. “Then the second one hit us really hard.”

Rio Cristal, like other restaurants in Miami-Dade, was forced to survive with take-out meals.

“I know some people think we said we were going to close as a marketing ploy but that was not the case,” she said. “Now I am getting set to take over my family’s business. I was in the mortgage business for 20 years and I loved my job and I didn’t imagine this would happen but I am really excited to take it on.”

William Rodriguez, a customer at the restaurant known for its Rio Cristal steak covered by a mountain of thinly-sliced, oil-fried French fries, said “It is about time. It is about time. I hope it stays this way for a long time.”

As CBS4 saw at another iconic restaurant, Versailles on SW 8th Street in Miami, restaurants are following a series of restrictions with indoor dining that include having no more than six people at a table. The doors and windows are wide open with the air conditioning on. Waiters and waitresses are required to wear masks, as are customers unless they are dining or drinking.

“This is a little closer to normal. I feel safe. I don’t feel like cattle,” who was dining inside Versailles.

“I feel more comfortable. It is too hot outside,” said Julia Escobar.

Vals Group Inc. consultant Raul Masvidal said “Indoor dining is really welcome in Miami where it is much too hot. The waiters and waitresses are trained not to take their masks off.”

Inside the Deli Lane Cafe in South Miami, owner Jahn Kirchoff said “I am extremely happy that we are back here. We are hoping like everyone that this will stick. I think every restaurant is very cognizant of what it takes to keep people safe and stay open. This has been a devastating blow to the industry. I don’t think there’s Been a single industry nationwide or worldwide that took this bug a hit.”

“Wear a mask,” he said. “It is not a huge deal. If it is going to keep someone safe and someone alive, I think we can all do our part to be good citizens.”

At Coral Bagels in Miami, owner Miriam Angulo said “I am super excited to be here and I am waiting for my customers to come back and we hope they can start their day off here with a nice cup of coffee and breakfast.”

She too has faced serious challenges.

“It has been very difficult,” she said. “Those two closures have really hurt us. We have maintained 75 percent of our staff while covered by PPE.”

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