Lattes go missing, drive-thrus slow as omicron hits US restaurants

Service at U.S. restaurants has slowed as Omicron, the latest COVID-19 variant, sickens workers and scares off others, leaving many businesses without enough staff.

Service at U.S. restaurants has slowed as Omicron, the latest COVID-19 variant, sickens workers and scares off others, leaving many businesses without enough staff. (Benoit Tessier, Reuters)


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NEW YORK — Starbucks customers arriving to claim their mobile drink orders have found cafes shut, and delivery drivers are waiting longer to pick up some McDonald's Big Macs.

Service at U.S. restaurants has slowed as omicron, the latest COVID-19 variant, sickens workers and scares off others, leaving many businesses without enough staff.

Starbucks customers complained on Twitter last week about temporary closures and reduced hours at locations around the country, including in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Georgia, California, New Jersey, Florida and New York.

Lawyer William Clarke told Reuters he placed a mobile order for coffee at a Starbucks in Hoboken, New Jersey at 9:20 a.m. one morning. But the store had not opened yet when he arrived, and he had to seek a refund. The location has been opening late and closing altogether on some days since the end of December, he said.

"I totally understand any staff shortage at the moment and understand if they need to adjust hours because of it," he said.

Zmer Andranigian showed up at his Glendale, California, Starbucks on Jan. 1 to pick the order he placed through the app at about 5 p.m., but the store was already closed. He returned the next day and was able to get his drinks, he said.

In Knoxville, Tennessee, one DoorDash driver said he has been waiting up to 30 minutes in drive-thru lines at fast-food chains since early December. He said chains including McDonald's, Taco Bell and Chick-fil-A began putting up signs last month warning of longer wait times for customers and drivers picking up mobile orders because of labor shortages.


I totally understand any staff shortage at the moment and understand if they need to adjust hours because of it.

–William Clarke, customer


Starbucks spokesman Reggie Borges said some of its roughly 9,000 U.S. cafes have adjusted hours and operating levels throughout the pandemic.

Some locations, including all 20 in Buffalo, New York, are carryout only, he said.

McDonald's said in a statement it was monitoring the impact of COVID-19 variants closely and was continuing to serve customers with approximately 99% of its U.S. restaurants open throughout the pandemic.

A Chick-fil-A spokesperson said the chicken chain is experiencing business challenges due to omicron, but 99% of its restaurants are still open. Taco Bell did not respond to requests for comment.

Restaurant job gap

The United States reported nearly 1 million new coronavirus infections on Jan. 3, the highest daily tally of any country in the world and nearly double the previous U.S. peak set the previous week.

Even before omicron, the restaurant industry had not recovered all the jobs it lost during the pandemic while people are also quitting at sky-high rates.

Employment at food service and drinking places as of December was also nearly 653,000 jobs – or about 5.3% — below pre-pandemic levels in February 2020, according to federal labor data released Friday.

Other factors are adding to complications, including bad weather in many parts of the country, employees who stay home because they fear catching COVID, and the holiday season when some workers wanted to be with family.

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Hilary Russ and Danielle Kaye

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