Businesses reduced to 25-percent capacity find additional space outdoors, expand takeout, introduce grab-and-go options, add a food truck and other innovations.
Food
A pair of Main Street restaurants are the latest addition to the culinary hotbed in downtown Las Vegas.
Businesses that had to keep bars closed because of COVID-19 are ready to welcome customers, even with requirements on social distancing and masks.
Three Square’s east campus will house its senior hunger programs and an upgraded call center, as well as additional warehouse space.
Food insecurity remains an issue for families in Las Vegas. New team efforts and the Three Square food bank answer the call despite the COVD-19 pandemic.
A total of eight restaurants at Santa Fe Station, Green Valley Ranch and Red Rock Resort are now open for either takeout or dine-in service.
Staffs aren’t big fans of masks, and dining areas can operate at just half of capacity, but several spots say they’re cooking and coping.
Sonia El-Nawal threw a special prom for her two teen employees, Olivia Hergenroeder and Seth Teller, at Rooster Boy Cafe. The event was a surprise for Hergenroeder, a graduating senior from Advanced Technologies Academy.
As owners struggle with dwindling supplies and increasing demand, they face difficult choices over charging more for meals.
Brio Tuscan Grille and Hamptons at Tivoli Village and Ben’Zaa Cantina in the northern valley will not reopen — the first because of corporate financial woes, the others because of changes planned by owners.
While some Southern Nevada restaurants reopened Saturday, the first day they were permitted to do so following the coronavirus shutdown, others were taking a cautious approach.
A native of New York who moved around the U.S. and saturated himself in Japanese culture, Warren Klein came to Las Vegas for a hospitality degree and never left.
Switch to Kindness, a gift card program launched Wednesday, offers a way to support the community during the coronavirus crisis.
Restaurants that don’t require masks for their employees are not in violation of Southern Nevada Health District regulations, although the CDC recommends them.
The Review-Journal staff has compiled many activities and options to assist you during this time.