B.C. hotel employee still recovering after disturbing incident with anti-mask customer - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. hotel employee still recovering after disturbing incident with anti-mask customer

Rhonda Comeau was allegedly spat on by an angry customer at a coffee shop in November and had to be rushed to hospital with heart problems afterwards. She asks people to follow COVID-19 regulations and be kind to each other.

'If you don't want to wear a mask, don't leave your house,' says Rhonda Comeau of Nelson's Adventure Hotel

Rhonda Comeau, accountant for Adventure Hotel in Nelson, B.C., stands at the hotel's Empire Coffee shop where she was allegedly spat on by an anti-mask customer in November. (Bob Keating/CBC)

The accountant for a hotel in downtown Nelson, B.C., is askingpeople to calmlyaccept COVID-19 regulations, a month after she was allegedly spat upon by an anti-maskcustomer and later suffereda series of heart attacks.

Rhonda Comeau, 54,entered theEmpire Coffee shop in the Adventure Hotel on Nov. 20 to see what was happeningafter being alerted bythe manager that there was a disturbance.

She says she saw a manwho had a mask, but wasn't wearing it, yelling profanities at female staff inside the store in the West Kootenay community.

"He said that he was having a conversation with the girls. And I said,' NoYou were being a bully,'" Comeau recalled telling himwhile standing at the shop entrance.

The man later put on a mask, but Comeau says he continued being aggressive.

"He pulled down his mask and told me I was ugly, and spat at me," she said.

Comeau called the police, whofollowed the manto a nearby supermarket where he was arrested.

According to hotel manager Rob Little, Comeaucameback to heroffice about an hour and a half after giving a statement to the police.

"I could feel the pain starting and it was like across the chest into my armpit, so I knew something was wrong," Comeau said. "I walked in and I said, 'Rob! 911! Heart attack!'"

According to Comeau, the suspect had a mask but refused to wear it inside the Empire Coffee shop. He later put the mask on, she says, but pulled it down before spitting at her. (Bob Keating/CBC)

Comeau says she had four heart attacksthat day before arriving at a hospital in Kelownaby ambulance, putting her in a dire medical situation.

Now back inNelson, Comeau is recovering, a processthat could take years.

"I have to really concentrate when I walk," she said. "I don't even like taking a Tylenol for a headache, and now I've got a purse full of pills."

Comeau also says her doctor has recommended psychotherapy because she can't stop thinking about the ugly incident.

Comeau says she realizes people are getting frustrated with public health orders, but that'snot an excuse for being rude, especially toward essential workers.

Rob Little, general manager of Adventure Hotel, called 911 for an ambulance last month after his colleague Rhonda Comeau felt the symptoms of a heart attack. (Bob Keating/CBC)

"A few months ago, you thought they [essential workers] were fantastic, and now you're treating them like dirt," she said. "That's not fair."

"If you don't want to wear a mask, don't leave your house," Comeau saidwhilewearing a mask in the Empire Coffee shop.

The Nelson Police Department says charges are pending against 40-year-old Jeremy Undershutearising from the incident.

Undershutehasalso been charged following anAug. 31 incident at Kootenay Bakery, which isa five-minutewalk from the Empire Coffee shop. The charges includeassaultinga peace officer, wilfully resisting or obstructing a peace officerand causing disturbance.

Tap the link below to listen to Rhonda Comeau on Daybreak South:

With files from Bob Keating