Giving Compass' Take:
- Chef and food advocate Tom Colechio discusses the work of The Independent Restaurant Coalition (IRC) to serve the needs of small businesses in the wake of the pandemic.
- How can donor capital help shape what future recovery of independent restaurants? How can recovery planning help curb labor shortages?
- Read more about the potential of small business recovery.
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The Independent Restaurant Coalition (IRC) is fighting to help independent bars and restaurants across the United States stay open.
In March 2020, the IRC formed to respond to the needs of these small food businesses. “We wanted to do something outside of what the [National Restaurant Association (NRA)] was doing because the NRA was going to really focus more on chains,” chef and food advocate Tom Colicchio tells Food Tank.
The IRC pushed for creation of the Restaurant Revitalization Fund (RRF), designed to provide grants to small bars and restaurants. The funding helped businesses pay better wages, provide benefits, and keep costs down for customers. “For those that actually got the money, it was great,” Colicchio says.
While 100,000 received grants through the RRF, roughly two-thirds of restaurants who applied—nearly 200,000 businesses—did not. According to a survey from the IRC, 80 percent of those that did not receive support are at risk of closing businesses.
“Restaurants are really struggling. We hear every day from restaurants, restaurateurs, and chefs that have maxed out credit cards. They move, they’ve sold their homes, they move into apartments and try to keep the place afloat,” Colicchio tells Food Tank. “And they just need help.”
In an effort to provide relief for businesses that did not receive this initial funding, the IRC is calling on Congress to replenish the RRF. Fortunately, they are seeing progress, with the House recently passing the Bill.
And while the RRF is the Coalition’s main focus for now, Colicchio says they plan to take on new projects in the future. To do this, “we need membership.”
Coming out the pandemic, Colicchio also believes that restaurant culture is shifting. In response to the #MeToo movement and increasing demands for safer work environments, he is hopeful that workplace harassment is on the decline. “I think now, when you see something that’s not right, you going to have to immediately jump in and deal with it,” Colicchio says. “I think that’s what’s really changing.”
Read the full article about saving independent restaurants by Elena Seeley at Food Tank.