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There's a Shortage of at Least 100,000 Restaurant Workers in Texa

Have you seen longer waits at local restaurants? The Texas Restaurant Association says there is a massive shortage of workers in the restaurant industry in the

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There's a Shortage of at Least 100,000 Restaurant Workers in Texa

Have you seen longer waits at local restaurants? The Texas Restaurant Association says there is a massive shortage of workers in the restaurant industry in the

Texas , United-states , Clayton-evans , Joe-monastero , Shanna-moore , Facebook , Texas-restaurant-association , Texas-restaurant , Waterloo-ice-house , Check-out-the-whataburger-secret , Brands-that-no-longer , Estaurants

'I feel for our colleagues in New York': Texas Restaurant Association reacts to NYC's new vaccine mandate


The spokesperson said he doesn't see a similar development unfolding anytime soon in Texas.
Author: Jordan Foster (KENS 5)
Published: 6:41 PM CDT August 3, 2021
Updated: 6:41 PM CDT August 3, 2021
SAN ANTONIO — New York is doing what no other city is. 
In hopes of halting another coronavirus surge, city leaders announced Tuesday workers and customers will need to prove they're vaccinated before participating in certain activities across the city.
“Not everyone is going to agree with this, I understand that, but for so many people this is going to be a lifesaving act,” New York Mayor Bill De Blasio said.
Before walking into gyms, eating at indoor restaurants or attending performance, people will have to show their vaccination cards to get in.

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WORKER SHORTAGE: Restaurants continue to struggle with hiring

WORKER SHORTAGE: Restaurants continue to struggle with hiring
fox7austin.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fox7austin.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Small Business Association now accepting applications for funding


Applications opened Monday for almost $29 billion in federal relief for restaurants.
Author: Teresa Woodard
Updated: 4:36 PM CDT May 4, 2021
DALLAS — In early 2020, restaurants were the second-largest source of jobs in private industry in the state of Texas, with more than 1.3 million employees.
By mid-2020, most of those jobs were gone, and many restaurants were too.
Those that found a way to survive remain in recovery mode, and they expect to stay in recovery mode a long while.
“I think we all have to be very honest that this is going to take time,” said Joe Monastero, chief strategy and operations officer for the Texas Restaurant Association.

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Texas restaurants don't have enough staff to operate at 100 percent capacity


Texas restaurants don't have enough staff to operate at 100 percent capacity
Chron
3 hrs ago
© LM Otero, STF / Associated Press
A customer takes a carryout order past a “now hiring” sign at a restaurant in Richardson, Texas, Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2020.
Stimulus checks, unemployment benefits, grocery stores, third party delivery services and COVID-19 vaccine availability all play a huge role in a dire issue affecting the restaurant industry in Houston and beyond: staffing shortages.
“We knew that prior to the pandemic, recruitment of employees was the number one issue that kept restaurant owners awake at night,” said Joe Monastero, chief strategy and operations officer for the Texas Restaurant Association, as reported by Dallas Observer's Lauren Drewes Daniels. “In 2019, 43 percent of restaurants surveyed listed staffing as their number one problem. When we did the survey in 2020, obviously the pandemic took over the top spot, but recruitment was still number two.”

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Dallas Restaurants Struggle With Staffing Shortages as They Begin to Reopen

Dallas Restaurants Struggle With Staffing Shortages as They Begin to Reopen
dallasobserver.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dallasobserver.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Cocktails to Go May Become Permanent


The Texas Legislature may do something so unprecedented this session that it’s almost impossible to describe how unprecedented it is — make restaurant cocktails to go, now a temporary fix, permanently legal.
Why unprecedented? Because much of the state was dry well into the 1990s, and it’s still illegal to buy spirits at retail in parts of Oak Cliff. And this is the same state where, in 2018, the state’s liquor store trade association and the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission joined forces to stop Walmart from opening liquor stores.
But the new bill, with support from Gov. Greg Abbot, the Texas Restaurant Association and — even more surprising — the state’s liquor stores, stands more than an even chance of approval. If that happens, you’ll be able to order a margarita, martini or Old Fashioned from participating restaurants as long as you order food with the cocktail. And the restaurant can deliver the drink itself, use a delivery service like Favor or offer curbside pickup.

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