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“During this climate, you should check to see what any establishment is doing before you go out, because you don’t know. We put up our hours, we put up everything about the bar. We make it a point to put on Facebook or social media what we expect. “Managers don’t have time to stop what they’re doing because you can’t follow simple instructions. “ Everybody wants to speak to a manager,” he says. Perruzza explains the hardline stance is to save time and grief for patrons and managers alike. No exceptions, no arguing, no talking to the manager.”Ĭanada Lifts Blood Donation Restrictions On Gay And Bisexual Men We will accept a picture or hard copy of your vaccination card.
#GAY BARS DENVER SEPTEMBER 18TH UPDATE#
It would give us more guidance.”Įarly Friday morning, Pitchers posted an update on its Instagram page that stated, “We will require proof of a COVID vaccination until further notice…. It would be helpful if we could understand how ABRA is defining the phrase ‘actively eating or drinking,’ but they didn’t do that previously, so I’m not expecting them to do it this time. So the way we’re enforcing it and the way we’re interpreting it may have to change next week based on new guidance. But I think it’s going to be very difficult to hold everyone accountable.”īailey says they expect “further guidance from ABRA next week. “We’re going to enforce it at the door, we’re going to enforce it if you’re in line for the bathroom, if you’re standing on your phone and security walks by you. “We think this is going to be very hard to enforce,” says Justin Parker, co-owner of The Dirty Goose on U Street NW. So we are going to have to attempt to manage people who are moving about and are potentially not following the rules with the masks.” They are going to be standing and milling around the bar. “Of course, times are different now,” Bailey continues.
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Wade Overturn Could Mean For LGBTQ Rights So we are reverting to what that mandate was before, and we’re going to operate the same way. There was a mask mandate previously, and we were operating under the assumption that the rule was people had to have on a mask unless they were actively drinking or eating. “The city put out zero guidelines,” says David Perruzza, co-owner and manager of Pitchers and A League of Her Own on 18th Street in Adams Morgan, “except that people have to wear masks when they go in a bar.”Įd Bailey, co-owner of TRADE on 14th Street NW and Number Nine, around the corner on P Street, says, “We are interpreting it based on the previous mandates of what we’ve been going through over the last 18 months. residents to “embrace” the new restrictions, but questions remain as to what exactly the mandate will mean for businesses - particularly gay bars.Ībsent from the mandate are any instructions regarding eating and drinking - for example, such as whether patrons can only remove masks if they are actively drinking, or merely holding a drink. Thanks to everyone that made it possible.Mayor Bowser said she expects D.C. Patrick's Day! Come on down and see some familiar faces and drink the first pints of the new location! We will be officially opening our doors today at 5PM for St. Here's the opening announcement from the bar's Facebook page: Paddy's, but in the end, the luck of the Irish came through. It came down to the wire as to whether the Celtic would open in time for St. to 2 a.m., with off-track betting until 10 p.m. Patrick's Day with corned beef and cabbage, Irish stew, and plenty of stout flowing from the brand-new taps.Īfter today, the Celtic will be open Monday through Thursday from 10:30 a.m. There will be a different kind of green beginning this afternoon as Celtic on Market helps Denver celebrate St. Hickey took over the space that was once occupied by Buca di Beppo and was also briefly a cannabis dispensary. But the Celtic didn't disappear for good instead, owner Noel Hickey moved his Irish tavern just a few blocks away, to 1400 Market Street, and will reopen today at 5 p.m. The Celtic Tavern and its sister pub, Delaney's, closed last September at 18th and Blake Streets, victims of redevelopment on a stretch that will soon become the Dairy Block, with a hotel, restaurants and shops set to spring up soon.