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Montreal

Late-night beer runs on hold under Quebec's curfew, to dismay of depanneur owners

Depanneurs are the saving grace for a lot of Quebecers grabbing last-minute pickups, but under the new curfew, owners say their most lucrative hours are being taken away.

Owners say evening hours are the most lucrative

Jeffrey Xue says he's been manning the cash at Depanneur St-Henri throughout the pandemic, and while a curfew allows him to get to sleep earlier, it cuts into much-needed revenue. (Sarah Leavitt/CBC)

Depanneurs are the saving grace forQuebecers grabbing last-minute pickups, but under the new curfew, owners say their most lucrative hours are about to betaken away.

"The four hours until 11 p.m. have the highest turnover. Now, they are cutting it," saysMichel Youssef, the owner ofDpanneur Beau Soirin St-Henri.

Depanneurs have so far been spared any closures during the COVID-19 pandemic, butunder the new lockdown regulations cominginto effect Saturday, they will have to close at 7:30 p.m.

"I hope people will adapt to the changes and come a bit earlier to pick up their things, otherwise it'll result in a big drop in sales," Youssef said.

Jeffrey Xue has been manning the cash atDpanneurSt-Henri almost exclusively throughout the pandemic. His employee quit when cases began to rise.

"[The curfew] is very bad. Closing earlier means I'll lose customers," he said.

"The only good thing is that I can go to sleep earlier, but I have to survive."

The other worry is just how long the new restrictions will last. As of now, the government says the plan is to lift the curfew on Feb.8.

"If it's one month, it should be okay. But if they add another month and another one and another one, like they did with restaurants, it's not good," Youssef said.

Michel Youssef, the owner of Dpanneur Beau Soir, says the hours between 7 and 11 p.m. are his highest turnover and the curfew takes that away. (Sarah Leavitt/CBC)

Tackling COVID-19 cases

Other owners understand the need for extreme measures.

"It's good for the system, for dealing with coronavirus," said Albert Sleeman, the owner ofDpanneur Laurion, also in St-Henri.

"Sure we'll lose business but I think people know we'll be open until 7:30 and need to come earlier."

Sleeman offers delivery so hopes that will make up for the closed doors.

For his part, Xue says he hopes cases do go down but doesn't understand why corner storesneed to close but schools remain open.

"For businesses, people come and put on masks, they wash their hands," he said, saying he limits capacity in his store to just four customers.

Albert Sleeman, the owner of Dpanneur Laurion, says he understands why the curfew has been put in place, and says he hopes delivery makes up for the loss. (Sarah Leavitt/CBC)