Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Cafe Zwart on Dam Square in Amsterdam, 5 August 2020
Cafe Zwart on Dam Square in Amsterdam, 5 August 2020 - Credit: NL Times / NL Times
Business
Food
Health
Amsterdam
Coronavirus
Covid-19
Femke Halsema
catering establishments
hospitality industry
KHN
Eveline Doornhegge
Wednesday, 19 August 2020 - 08:25

Share this article:

Catering sector calls Amsterdam's new Covid rules "impractical and unreasonable"

The Dutch association for the hospitality and catering sector KHN is not pleased by the extra strict monitoring on adherence to coronavirus measures that Mayor Femke Halsema announced for catering establishments in Amsterdam. According to the association, these rules are "impractical ad unreasonable" and will lead to more bankruptcies.

On Tuesday, the Amsterdam mayor announced that catering establishments who break the coronavirus rules will be ordered closed for up to four weeks after one warning, instead of two. More measures may follow if the coronavirus infections in the city continue to rise, including that restaurants and bars will have to close at midnight, Halsema said.

According to the KHN, this is going too far. "We see that catering entrepreneurs have great difficulty in enforcing the rules," Eveline Doornhegge, the association's regional manager in Amsterdam, said to NU.nl. "We are not the police, we are the hospitality industry. Entrepreneurs only have to turn their backs once and things can go wrong."

She fears that the forced closures will lead to bankruptcy for entrepreneurs who are already struggling. "This is impractical and unreasonable," Doornhegge said. According to her, rules are broken all over Amsterdam, not only in restaurants and bars.

Doornhegge is also concerned by the municipality possibly limiting closing times to midnight. "This can have major adverse consequences for us," she said to the newspaper. Entrepreneurs will lose turnover. "And the question is whether it will help. If we have to close early, many customers will be on the street at the same time."

More like this

Image
Hotel reception
Dutch hotel room rates more than recovered from pandemic; Amsterdam tops €200 per night
Image
Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema submits her vote in the Municipal Elections, March 18, 2026.
Amsterdam tells city stats agency to stop polling voter sentiment, election forecasts
Image
Mayor Femke Halsema on Amsterdam's boat in the Canal Parade during Pride Amsterdam 2024
Amsterdam to tackle discrimination, violent incidents with priority during World Pride
Image
Emergency services at the scene of an explosion and fire on Osdorper Ban in Amsterdam Nieuw-West, 12 June 2026
Amsterdam mayor visits site of apartment building explosion; Search for victims ongoing
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Dutch activists on Gaza Flotilla file sexual violence charges against Israeli soldiers
  • Reports of sexual violence in the Netherlands rise 21% for third consecutive year
  • Dutch government establishing an organization to fight foreign influence on elections
  • Femicide: Dutch man sentenced to 21.5 years for killing wife, burning her body
  • Quarter of young Dutch AI-users share more with chatbot than friends, family

Top stories

  • Dutch housing market cools off: Fewer mortgage applications, higher  interest rates
  • Unaccompanied child asylum seekers relatively often suspected of crimes
  • Over 100 Dutch girls, young women forced into prostitution in Belgium, Germany
  • Dutch inflation rate falls back below 3 percent as energy price spike flattens
  • PFAS detected in all Dutch breast milk samples, but levels decline from 2014

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content