S M Ong: Table for one, please?
Act Blur
Remember just over a week ago when the Government announced that for dining in, the maximum group size would be reduced from five to two because of the resurgence of coronavirus cases in Singapore?
Except!
Groups of up to five might be allowed depending on whether you were vaccinated, from the same household, under 12 years old or could eat 10 bowls of curry noodles in one sitting.
There were more permutations than variants of Covid-19 and Loki. You needed a flow chart and a stiff drink.
It was so mind-bogglingly convoluted that some places such as McDonald's, Burger King, KFC, Subway, Long John Silver's, Toast Box and Nando's decided not to bother and to just limit it to two people.
That lasted like three days.
Oh, were the rules too complicated for you snowflakes? Now the Government has made it simpler for everyone.
Vaccinated, unvaccinated, same household, different households, children, no children, pets, don't care. How many diners? Zero.
Any questions?
What a roller-coaster ride it has been for the food and beverage industry this month.
Or year. When 2021 started, the number was eight. Then in May, it went down to five.
People were grumbling that they could not celebrate Mother's Day properly. Now they would sell their mothers to get back those days again as a week after Mother's Day, dining-in was banned altogether.
We had to do take-out for Father's Day, getting the shorter end of the stick as usual.
When July started, the number was two. Then up to five. Then it was down to two again but five if you have the right combination. Now it is back to zero.
Pardon the whiplash.
Some blame the KTV joints. Some blame the dirty old men. Some blame the Government's oversight and/or the lack of it. I blame the Japanese for inventing karaoke.
But instead of playing the blame game where everyone loses, I believe it is time for a new idea. Or perhaps the revival of an old one?
LETTER
On May 25, in the midst of the post-Mother's Day dining-in ban, The Straits Times published a letter suggesting that we resume dining-in with only one diner a table.
"This way," reader Cheng Shoong Tat wrote, "the impact of the recent Covid-19 measures on food outlets can be somewhat cushioned, while less takeaway waste is produced."
While some, including me, supported the idea, many took umbrage, like the person who wrote this letter that ST published a few days later: "It is acceptable to make an exception for essential workers, including delivery riders, who do need a place to eat - usually for only a short while.
"But if one diner per table were allowed for the community at large, there may be instances where diners continue to linger unmasked after having their meal.
"Furthermore, there could be a potential loophole when two family members or friends go out together for a meal. They might chat with each other while having their meal, even if they are seated apart."
It is an enforcement issue then?
Anyway, the idea became moot once dining-in resumed with up to two diners a table on June 21.
But now that we have doubled back to the post-Mother's Day zero dining-in apocalypse since last Thursday, the single-diner idea seems worth revisiting as it offers some respite.
While it has been argued that it is the removal of your mask while you are eating that is the issue regardless of whether it is one or more diners, the way the Government has been playing seesaw with the number of diners demonstrates otherwise.
If nothing else, you could finally eat alone in a restaurant without people feeling sorry for you because they think you have no friends.
Best of all, no flow chart required.
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