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Baltimore will lift one-hour dining limit on restaurants

Baltimore will lift its one-hour limit on restaurant visits starting next week, Mayor Brandon M. Scott announced Wednesday.

Scott said the limit, instituted as part of an effort to reduce the spread of Covid-19 in public spaces, will be removed thanks to improving coronavirus metrics. He noted Baltimore now has the lowest seven-day positivity rate in the state, at 3.1%.

The limit will be lifted at 6 a.m. Monday, said Stefanie Mavronis, a spokesperson for the mayor’s office. Restaurants will still be required to maintain a sign-in/sign-out sheet for guests, which helps to assist with contact tracing.

Still, the mayor urged continued adherence to Covid-19 precautions as the city battles the virus.

“We’re very encouraged,” he said at a news conference Wednesday outside City Hall, “but we also want to remind people that we’re still going to be cautious. We’re still in a pandemic.”

The time limit on dining, which requires sit-in restaurant patrons to finish their meals within one hour…

Read the full story from the Washington Business Journal.

Sonic Drive-In to open its first restaurant in Northern Virginia’s I-95 corridor

Fast-food chain Sonic Drive-In has filed plans to build a new restaurant in Prince William County, its first outpost along the Interstate 95 corridor in Northern Virginia. The 1,400-square-foot restaurant, with two drive-thru lanes, 12 pull-up ordering stalls and a dining patio, will be located at 4115 Talon Drive in Dumfries, part of the Barracks Row at Quantico commercial development less than a mile northwest of the I-95 interchange at state Route 234. The location “will constitute a flagship Sonic design that will serve as a benchmark for future restaurant drive-thru development,” according to a written narrative accompanying the application, filed by Noah Klein of Venable LLP.
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