The National Restaurant Association, a restaurant industry group, sent a letter on Monday to majority and minority leaders in both the Senate and House of Representatives sharing the results of a nationwide survey on the economic plight of restaurants.
The survey found that since the onset of the pandemic, 17% of US restaurants — or about 110,000 establishments— have permanently closed down, with 10,000 closing in the last three months alone.
The majority of restaurants that closed were not brand-new businesses, the association found: on average, they'd been in business for 16 years.
"What these findings make clear is that more than 500,000 restaurants of every business type — franchise, chain, and independent — are in an unprecedented economic decline. And for every month that passes without a solution from Congress, thousands more restaurants across the country will close their doors for good," according to Sean Kennedy, executive vice president of public affairs for the group and the author of the letter.
The National Restaurant Association is advocating for a relief plan that would include a second round of Paycheck Protection Program loans as well as a tax credit to help employers keep workers on their payrolls.
For those restaurants who have managed to stay open this year, the economic picture is still grim. The survey found that 58% of both chain and independent restaurants expect they'll have to furlough or lay-off employees during the next three months, and most full-service restaurants have seen a 36% decline in sales revenue during the pandemic.
The survey findings come as restaurants nationwide face another round of lockdowns amid a worsening coronavirus landscape. Last week, restaurant sales dropped to their lowest level since the start of August, according to UBS research, as cases jumped 10% in the US. The US now has a total of more than 14 million confirmed COVID cases and 280,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.