Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Time runs out for some small businesses

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NEWYORK » Clay Reynolds is starting to make peace with a gut-wrenching reality: He may have to once again close his business, Arrichion Hot Yoga and Circuit Training.

The $900 billion pandemic relief package that Congress just approved contains billions in aid directed specifical­ly at struggling small companies like Reynolds’. Arrichion received a loan last spring from the government’s earlier economic aid program. But Reynolds, a co-owner, needs another. Business was down 75% in the third quarter. The fourth quarter will likely be worse.

Like other independen­t fitness studios and gyms, his has lost many longtime members who feared working out alongside others indoors or don’t want to wear a mask while exercising. And after being forced to close during the spring, Reynolds worries that the surge in virus cases will bring new government restrictio­ns.

“There’s a good chance this type of business will be shut down again in the next few weeks,” said Reynolds, whose studios are in North Carolina and Utah.

America’s entreprene­urs welcomed Congress’ longdelaye­d relief package, which provides $325 billion in aid to small companies and makes it easier for them to gain access to grants and loans under its renewed Paycheck Protection Program. But the rescue comes too late for tens of thousands of businesses that have already closed or may have to soon, a consequenc­e of a pandemic that has kept away diners, shoppers and customers since early spring. The National Restaurant Associatio­n, for example, estimates that 110,000 U.S. restaurant­s — 17% — have shut down indefinite­ly or for good, doomed by restrictio­ns on their hours or capacity and by Americans’ reluctance to eat out.

“If you closed already, it doesn’t help you a bit,’’ said Henry Pertman, director of operations at Total Image Creative, a Maryland-based hospitalit­y consulting firm. “We lost a lot of restaurant­s that didn’t have to go under. They saw no light at the end of the tunnel.’’

It’s a fear that weighs heavily on one restaurate­ur, Amy Sidhom. She isn’t convinced that the new federal aid will be enough to significan­tly help her or the 21 workers she furloughed heading into the holiday season. The surging pandemic has dealt a devastatin­g blow to her restaurant, Crumbs, in Danville, Calif., about 30 miles east of San Francisco

After she’d spent about $35,000 to set up for outdoor dining, Crumbs’ sales had finally returned to their prepandemi­c levels, enabling the 2-year-old restaurant to recall its entire staff of 25. But the comeback was short lived. After outdoor dining was banned through most of California earlier this month, Crumbs was forced to return to takeout only.

Sales have plunged 85% to 90% in recent weeks. Crumbs now has only four employees.

As a stark reminder of the pandemic’s economic toll, Sidhom has set up in front of Crumbs’ now-empty outdoor seating area a row of empty chairs bearing the names and sad stories of the employees who have lost their jobs.

“We are kind of day-byday now,” she said. “It doesn’t seem like there is an end in sight, and it doesn’t seem like there is empathy toward small businesses, particular­ly restaurant­s. So, no, I am not optimistic.”

Many small and independen­t retailers are in jeopardy,

too. They typically collect an outsize proportion of their annual revenue during the holiday shopping season. But government restrictio­ns are limiting how many customers can be in a store at one time. Even apart from such restrictio­ns, many consumers are staying home anyway as a precaution against the resurgent virus.

Especially vulnerable are small independen­t shops, many of which are barely hanging on and will likely close their doors after the holidays — joining more than 8,600 retailers that have already gone out of business this year, according to market researcher CoreSight.

For them, Congress took too long and probably offered too little relief on top of a $2 trillion rescue package that the government enacted in March but whose benefits had largely expired. That aid package introduced PPP loans, which are meant to help small businesses keep employees on their payrolls.

“We really needed this second round and renewal of the program back in August to help many businesses to get through the last quarter of 2020,” said Karen Kerrigan, president of the advocacy group Small Business & Entreprene­urship Council.

Reynolds, the fitness stu

dio owner, is hoping for government help to tide his fitness company over until a coronaviru­s vaccine becomes widely available and customers feel comfortabl­e enough to return to Arrichion.

Now, he said, “would be the right time to get it, to get us through the winter.’’

At the same time, for small businesses the new aid is in some ways an improvemen­t on the original rescue package. It will, for example, let small businesses take a tax deduction for expenses paid for with PPP money, including payroll, rent and utilities. And companies that already received one PPP loan can seek another if their revenue has dropped by 25% in any quarter of 2020 from a year earlier.

 ?? MICHAEL LIEDTKE — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Dec. 21photo, empty chairs outside Crumbs restaurant in Danville, Calif., bear the names of workers who have lost their jobs during the pandemic.
MICHAEL LIEDTKE — ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Dec. 21photo, empty chairs outside Crumbs restaurant in Danville, Calif., bear the names of workers who have lost their jobs during the pandemic.

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