• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
The Leader

The Leader

Tipton County's Newspaper since 1886

  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Churches
    • Courts
    • Education
    • Election 2024
    • Events
    • Local Government
    • Local Politics
    • Military
    • Public Records
    • Public Safety
  • Sports
    • All
    • Baseball
    • Basketball
    • Cross Country
    • Fishing
    • Football
    • Golf
    • Soccer
    • Softball
    • Volleyball
    • Wrestling
  • E-Editions
  • Public Notices
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Contact Us
    • Submit News
    • Advertise With Us
  • Where to Buy

As restaurants prepare for re-opening next week, Jose Reyes reflects on generosity of the community

By Echo Day on April 23, 2020

Curbside takeout and delivery is how restaurants like Jose’s Mexican Street Tacos, which opened two weeks before state-mandated closures for restaurants, have been operating for the last month.

During his daily briefing, Gov. Bill Lee said the first phase of re-opening will begin with the restaurant industry next week.

The state will begin with allowing restaurants to open their doors for patrons again on Monday, April 27, and retail businesses on Wednesday, April 29, but they must do so at a reduced capacity and follow specific guidelines.

The guidelines are still unclear, but Lee said he planned to give more information during a Friday morning briefing.

José Reyes thought he had to wait until Friday, May 1, which is the day after the governor’s safer-at-home order expires, to have diners inside his new restaurant on Covington’s square.

He opened Jose’s Mexican Street Food just two weeks before the state, county and city all declared a state of emergency from March 22-24. The move closed restaurants, gyms, salons, barber shops and bars to the public, forcing restaurants to utilize takeout, curbside delivery and home delivery instead.

In the early days of the emergency restaurant owners had mixed reports about how business was going. Wells Kitchen’s volume was down 80 percent a month ago, but Court Square Cafe was still seeing “a good number” of takeout orders.

“It’s not normal, but I’m happy,” said Court Square’s owner Becky Spitzer.

In the last month, some restaurants have had to close temporarily. This was the case for Applebee’s, Breakfast Cove and Mid-South BBQ.

Reyes was also worried about how his business would survive the economic effects of not only a global pandemic, but the economic effects of a global pandemic on a restaurant which hadn’t yet been established in the community.

He has now operated his restaurant longer under what is casually being called quarantine – and he’s had to add extra phone lines due to the call volume – than he did before. He is eager to return to normal, though.

“We’re going to go with the flow and adapt to whatever we need to do, we’re going to take precautions, but I want to get to know my customers. They become like family to me.”

He won’t forget the way Jose’s Mexican Street Food opened, though, and the way the people of Tipton County embraced him and other local restaurants during a time that could have ruined them financially.

“We were definitely supported by the community,” he said by phone Friday. “They really reacted by helping local businesses, by coming together as a community, so that we wouldn’t be as affected from how we were doing previously.”

That help allowed him to pay it forward, recently donating 250 meals.

“That was all thanks to the community. If the community wasn’t able to donate with me, I wouldn’t be able to donate to others,” Reyes said. “They kept a lot of us going.”

It’s not yet known when other businesses like gyms, salons and barbershops and churches may re-open to the public, however. Lee said he wants to be methodical and logical with the phased re-opening.

“When the data shows we’re in a place where we can open, we’ll go to phase two.”

Related Articles:

88a1f9fc Cb86 11e5 9a3f 23ceb1c14e77Health King was a well-respected, beloved coach Local scout building an all-inclusive park in Covington for his Eagle Scout project Cap and Gown with 2020 tasselIt’s happening: Graduation plans for the Class of 2020 have been announced

Posted Under: Business, News Tags: coronavirus, gov bill lee, reopening, restaurants, retail

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Search

Featured News

Former Covington, Munford basketball coach Tim Halford inducted into BCAT Hall of Fame

April 8, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

A man known in these … [Continue Reading...] about Former Covington, Munford basketball coach Tim Halford inducted into BCAT Hall of Fame

Brighton midfielder J Kiphut signs soccer scholarship with Dyersburg State

April 1, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

Brighton senior J … [Continue Reading...] about Brighton midfielder J Kiphut signs soccer scholarship with Dyersburg State

Brighton’s Pierce Meacham signs with Cumberland University

March 11, 2025 By Jeff Ireland

In this day and age, … [Continue Reading...] about Brighton’s Pierce Meacham signs with Cumberland University

Munford High School closed Thursday after teacher found deceased

March 6, 2025 By The Leader

Munford High School … [Continue Reading...] about Munford High School closed Thursday after teacher found deceased

Tags

auvic white black history braxton sharp brighton baseball brighton basketball brighton football brighton high school city of covington City of Munford coronavirus covid-19 covington Covington Baseball covington basketball Covington football covington high school Covington HS covington police covington police station Election 2020 events homicide J.R. Kirby Jalen Fayne Jamarion Dowell jeff huffman john edwards Jordan Bell JR Kirby Munford basketball munford football munford high school murder ronnie gorton sex crimes shooting Slade Calhoun tcso Tipton-Rosemark Academy Tipton County Museum tipton county schools tipton county sheriff's office town of atoka town of mason TRA basketball

Footer

The Leader is a weekly newspaper, published on Thursdays, serving Tipton County, Tenn. since 1886.

Contact us: news@covingtonleader.com

Editor’s Choice

Here’s how Home Depot and a team of volunteers helped make over CIAA

December 5, 2019 By Echo Day

Black History Month: Mason’s John W. Boyd went from slavery to the statehouse

February 7, 2020 By The Leader

Search

Copyright © 2025 · The Leader | Legacy Media · Log in