Governor Hochul announced a new initiative to build upon extensive efforts already underway by the New York State Department of Labor to connect job seekers to the record more than 220,000 available jobs, tools and training resources.
Brian Candee, who has been in the restaurant business for 30 years, normally gets 50 to 60 emails when he puts a help wanted ad on Craigslist. But when he was hiring for Dinh Dinh Kitchen, his new Southeast Asian-American restaurant in Bedford Hills in Westchester County, he got zero.
Zero.
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” he said. “I actually anticipated that hiring wouldn’t be too difficult because of the reduction of restaurants. I figured there would be a lot of good, skilled people looking for work.”
Others in the industry are experiencing the same thing.
Christopher Bates owns several restaurants in the Finger Lakes wine region. But lately you can find Bates
Restaurant industry faces labor shortage in New York after pandemic uticaod.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uticaod.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Restaurant owners across New York state say an unheard-of labor shortage has stymied their ability to dig themselves out of the financial shortfalls that have come as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
And it comes at a time when warmer weather and the freedom that comes with vaccines are making diners, cooped up all winter, more eager than ever to go out to eat. When they do, these diners will likely see the effects of the workforce shortage, including adapted menus, hard-to-find reservations, higher prices, and, in the end, fewer restaurants.
“Across the board, for the front of house and for kitchen staff it’s been near impossible to find staff, said Tyrone Azanedo of Maura’s Kitchen in Nyack, Rockland County. I think it’s a combination of things: They’re getting unemployment money, may be too scared to come back or have left the industry.