New York City restaurants to reopen at 25% indoor capacity on Valentine's Day: Cuomo

istock_012921_restopening

LeoPatrizi/iStockBy KELLY MCCARTHY, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — New York City restaurants can once again serve customers indoors starting Feb. 14.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo finally announced in a press conference on Friday that restaurants in New York City “can reopen indoor dining at 25% on Valentine’s Day.”

He said that “the restaurants want a period of time” to prepare for reopening in order to hire back staff, plan menus, get orders in, etc.

“You could make a reservation now or plan dinner — you propose on Valentine’s Day — you have the wedding ceremony up to 150 people,” he said as he continued to unveil his plans for reopening.

The good news came on the 335th day of the ongoing pandemic as positive cases hit the lowest point since Dec. 11

Earlier this week Andrew Rigie, executive director of the NYC Hospitality Alliance, said he was looking forward to hearing Cuomo’s plan to reopen indoor dining.

“It’s paramount these decisions are based on data. And, because New York City has lower infection and hospitalization rates than nearly all counties in the rest of the state where indoor dining is open at 50% occupancy, our city’s restaurants must be treated equitably and reopened safely,” Rigie explained. “Highly regulated, limited occupancy indoor dining has been a minor factor for virus transmission and full shutdowns have exacerbated the current economic crisis, which has permanently shuttered thousands of restaurants and bars and put over 140,000 people out of work in our city.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

g_trump_071125251907

What to know about Trump’s new tariffs on Canada

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images (WASHINGTON) — President Donald Trump ratcheted up tariffs on Canada late Thursday, stoking tensions with a top U.S. trade partner as the two sides try to hash out a trade agreement by the end of the month. The

news_karolineleavitt_77258619

Dow closes down 420 points as Trump unveils new tariffs

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images (WASHINGTON) — Stocks closed down significantly on Monday after President Donald Trump announced steep tariffs on seven countries and threatened to impose new levies on others. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 422 points, or

getty_tariffs-gty-er-250707_1751903594103_hpembed_3x2369193

What to know about Trump's shifting tariff deadline

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images (WASHINGTON) — President Donald Trump on Monday will sign an executive order delaying steep levies on dozens of countries that were set to take effect on Wednesday, the White House said. Trump’s so-called reciprocal