When server Victoria Flores greets customers at the Pier Chowder House and Tap Room, she presents them with a special âPower Outage Menu.â
The smoke fans in the hood over the grill use more electricity than their backup generators can manage, so theyâve had to decommission it and instead rely on their gas-powered appliances.
âWe can only do fried food and stuff from the flattop stove, like tacos and quesadillas,â Flores says. âOur menu is usually three pages long and we’ve limited it to one page.â
They’ve had to limit their hours until the sun goes down at 6 p.m. The walk-in fridge and freezer use all the power from the generator, so there are no lights in the front of the house, or the back. The kitchen staff is cooking under a single lantern.
âIt’s a pretty drastic change,â Flores says.
The power went out throughout Mendocino County on Saturday, as part of Pacific Gas & Electricâs planned electricity shutoffs. Amid dry, windy weather conditions and wildfires already burning in parts of Northern California, the utility cut power in an attempt to prevent sparking additional fires, leaving almost 1 million customers without power, including 38,000 in Mendocino County.
For more than four days, the tiny coastal city of Point Arena, about three hours north of San Francisco, was in the dark. Until early Thursday, Main Street was a ghost town, with businesses closed and barely a car parked on the street.
âItâs a burden on everybody,â said Paul Andersen, administrative assistant at Point Arenaâs city hall. âThereâs been a lot of food loss. The co-op lost food, the school district lost food.â
The Chowder House was one of two restaurants that managed to stay open on generator power.
âWe have two, a small one and a big one,â Flores says, 3500 watts and 5500 watts, âbut the big one is not being friendly with us.â
Power is out over the bar, so the restaurant can’t pull draft beer. Only bottled beer is served during the outage. (April Dembosky/KQED)
Instead of their usual four soups, they only have one. Thereâs no power over the bar, so no draft beer. The soda machine is out, too, so thereâs only bottled beer, canned ginger ale and water.
All the drinks are served in plastic cups and the food comes in red and white paper trays, because the city asked them to keep their water usage down, too.
âAll the waste water from that restaurant goes into a lift station at the pier,â Andersen explains. âThat station pumps it to the wastewater plant, but when the power’s out, it doesnât pump.â
Overall, customers have been really patient and understanding, Flores says. But even though theyâre better off than if they had shut down completely, theyâre still taking a hit to the bottom line.
âWeâve been extremely slow,â she says. With internet and cell service down, ânobody wants to come out because they donât know if anythingâs open.â
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