On May 1, 2020, OSHA issued an alert with safety tips for restaurant and food and beverage businesses as they provide curbside and takeout service.

OSHA recommended the following:

  • Reserve parking spaces near the front door for curbside pickup only;
  • Avoid direct hand-off, when possible;
  • Display a door or sideway sign with the services available (e.g., takeout, curbside), instructions for pickup, and hours of operation;
  • Practice sensible social distancing by maintaining 6 feet between co-workers and customers. Mark 6-foot distances with floor tape in pickup lines, encourage customers to pay ahead of time by phone or online, temporarily move workstations to create more distance and install plexiglass partitions, if feasible;
  • Allow workers to wear masks over their nose and mouth to prevent them from spreading the virus;
  • Provide a place to wash hands and alcohol-based hand rubs containing at least 60% alcohol; and
  • Encourage workers to report any safety and health concerns.

OHSA issued the guidance as a one-page poster employers may choose to display in the workplace. See here.

Businesses should seriously consider following these guidelines. However, failing to follow these recommendations will not necessarily result in a fine. Under OSHA's General Duty Clause employers are required to furnish employees a place of employment free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to employees. OSHA requires employers to assess occupational hazards to which their workers may be exposed. The clause requires employers to have workplaces free of known hazards that can be feasibly mitigated.

OSHA has directed its compliance officers to evaluate an employer's good faith efforts to comply with safety and health standards during the coronavirus epidemic and will take good faith efforts into strong consideration when determining whether to issue a citation.

This restaurant-specific guidance is the latest in a series of industry-specific guidance documents OSHA has issued to protect workers and customers.

This guidance does not address dine-in services. More than a dozen states have begun loosening restrictions on businesses reopening, including restaurants. For instance, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp issued an executive order on April 23, 2020 permitting restaurants to resume dine-in services effective April 27, 2020. Restaurants in Georgia may serve no more than 10 customers in the facility per 500 square feet of public space. Additionally, restaurants must follow 39 specific restrictions (The order is available here; the 39 restrictions are located on pages 7-9). Although these restrictions are not binding outside of Georgia, they are instructive of the types of safety measures restaurants should consider as they plan to resume full operations. Restaurants should review any government restrictions in the jurisdiction in which they operate. A further discussion of these restrictions and other issues to consider upon reopening is available in this PowerPoint presentation.

Originally published 5 May, 2020

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