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Struggling restaurant owners outraged after NYC completely closes outdoor dining option

Restaurant owners on Midtown Manhattan's 52nd street were outraged Tuesday evening after learning from New York City officials that they would be unable to provide outdoor seating for their patrons due to caution tape blocking the express bus lane.

According to local restaurant Pescatore's director of operations Charles Devigne, seven restaurants on the street are typically allowed to use the express bus lane for outdoor dining between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. and then after 7 p.m., when buses aren't running.

Tuesday evening, however, city officials notified managers of the seven restaurants on the street that the lane was scheduled to be painted and that there was no way to reschedule.

"This obviously is a one night interruption and, in the grand scheme of things, doesn't seem to be the end of the world, but when you're already sort of teetering on the edge, this is really just a bad blow," Devigne told FOX Business.

However, he said the city's agencies should have informed them and coordinated with the restaurants on the street before making a decision.

"It's more important that we have the seven restaurants that are in front that depend on this as a dining room to be open," he added.

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Mercedes Manso, a manager at another restaurant on the street called Socaratt Paella Bar, told FOX Business that while she is thankful that her restaurant can use the bus lane, the incovenience caused by the painting adds to the overall stress of restaurants on the street already struggling to survive during the coronavirus pandemic.

"It's just, you know, poor planning by the city," Manso said. "When they know that restaurants rely on outdoor dining business, it would just be very helpful that we can make it like a win win so they can do it maybe in the morning instead of, you know, dining primetime at six and seven o'clock when we do the majority of our business. It's just like there's no consideration for us and that's really frustrating."

She noted that her restaurant is already operating at limited capacity and doing its best to stay afloat.

"We've been really grateful for to have [the bus lane] but we're still doing probably 60 percent business overall," Manso said. "But, you know, we're just trying to hang in there and just make the best of the situation."

While painting for the bus lane has been finished and is drying, many customers left the block due to the smell left behind, according to Devigne.

A spokesperson for the Department of Transporation did not immediately return a FOX Business request for comment.