Jo Schneider waited months after the state gave the OK in May for restaurants to reopen before she turned the lights back on at downtown鈥檚 , formerly La Cocina Restaurant.
The reopening lasted six weeks.
On Sunday, Dec. 6, Schneider shut the doors again, saying she was at a loss navigating the growing COVID-19 pandemic with no assistance or guidance from state and federal officials.
鈥淚 just can鈥檛 figure out how to keep people safe,鈥 a visibly frustrated Schneider said Monday, Dec. 7. 鈥淚 felt pretty confident we were being safe, but people were afraid, and I don鈥檛 blame them. We are dealing with something that none of us knows how to deal with but we are forced to deal with it in our own way, in our own little bubble because there is no one in the federal government stepping up to help us.鈥
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The closing comes weeks after Schneider and her sons Ben and Eli rebranded La Cocina as LaCo 鈥 which stands for Love and Community 鈥 and added the family鈥檚 downtown bar/brunch restaurant to the mix. TallBoys was located for several years on the bustling bar and party district of North Fourth Avenue.
The family鈥檚 other Tucson restaurant, the 36-year-old at 1730 E. Speedway, has remained closed and will likely not reopen until early next year, when Schneider said a former employee plans to buy it and run it.
Schneider said she is hoping that the federal government relaunches its paycheck protection program that provided forgivable loans to businesses to pay employee wages, rent and other expenses to keep businesses open. But her sense of hope is overshadowed by her frustration that government officials have dragged their feet on passing any sort of COVID-19 stimulus since early summer, when talks at the federal level stalled.
鈥淚 think locally people have been amazing 鈥 but our state and our federal government have let us down, have left us to figure out how to handle our lives in the middle of a global pandemic when they should help us figure it out,鈥 she said.
Schneider has almost gone through what she received in the first PPP distribution program last summer and has offered her employees loans to help them make ends meet on the state鈥檚 maximum $240 weekly unemployment benefit, she said. So far, she said, none of her 25 full- and part-time workers have taken her up on the offer, which she said they would not have to repay until they returned to work.
Schneider said she hopes to reopen LaCo, which she bought 10 years ago, on Feb. 3 鈥 Bentley鈥檚 37th anniversary.