Quebec announces aid for bars, restaurants as COVID-19 restrictions take effect
MONTREAL — The Quebec government promised on Thursday financial support for bars and restaurants forced to close by the province’s partial lockdown, but questions remain about how restrictions on socializing will be applied.
The new rules came into effect in greater Montreal, Quebec City and a region south of the provincial capital on Thursday after the regions were moved to the province’s highest COVID-19 alert level earlier this week.
Bars and restaurants — including restaurants that remain open for takeout — will be able to get loans to pay for expenses including municipal taxes, mortgage interest, electricity and rent not covered by an existing federal program. Up to 80 per cent of the loan amount — to a maximum of $15,000 — will be forgivable, Fitzgibbon told reporters at a news conference in Quebec City.
“It’s damn good news for us,” Paul Holder, who co-owns several restaurants in Montreal, said in an interview after the announcement. But Holder, whose businesses include the bar Darling and bistros Brasserie Bernard and Holder, said that while the money will help, it won’t cover the full amount of rent and taxes.


