Los Angeles Times

Pandemic pedicures as nail salons given green light to open

- By Anh Do

As soon as the salon doors opened, customers with ragged, discolored nails streamed in Friday, heading for the socially distanced chairs.

But first, Christine Dinh stepped up to take their temperatur­es. Inside the narrow, spotless Captivate Nail Spa, she asked them to sign a form affirming the risks of a COVID-19 outbreak and that they did not show symptoms — agreeing to release the Fullerton shop from legal claim in case of infection. Then she directed each person to wash her hands.

Behind Dinh, her mother, owner Crystal Trang Luong, scrubbed the magentafle­cked toes of a junior accountant who said she was grateful to have “presentabl­e feet,” just in time to ease into leather summer sandals.

Friday unfolded as a reopening for nail salons, nearly 100 days after the businesses shut down, eventually getting the go-ahead from California Gov. Gavin Newsom. Many resumed operations with face shields, foot shields, table shields and all manner of safeguards now required to keep manicurist­s and clients as protected as possible under guidelines from the state and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Whatever they require is what we do. I’m not thinking so much about the cost — though, yes, there’s three months of back rent waiting to be paid and not having the income to cover it,” Luong, 48, said. “I’m thinking mainly about safety. If we can’t offer it, how will we all survive?”

Just five months after Luong bought the salon, scrimping to save and borrowing money from her sister-in-law, the surge of the

novel coronaviru­s forced her to shut down on March 17. Stuck at home, she obsessivel­y followed the news, searching for clues for when her industry could reopen.

She said it saddened her to hear that community spread of the virus originated from a nail salon, as Newsom announced in May. By June, his staff had said that was a mistake, promising to help push for reopening as part of Phase 3, when state officials allowed personal services and its employees to return to work. Friday was the day for bars and nail salons.

“You know, I’m ecstatic that they’re back. I can’t wait to tell my mom,” said Joanne Bockian, 70, who’s been coming to Captivate once a month. She made an appointmen­t to surprise her mother, who turns 96 in July, who “gets such a treat out of our mani-pedis,” said the San Gabriel Valley resident who visits her parent in Fullerton weekly.

“They’re very good at pampering here and they have nice touches, talking softly and helping her to put her shoes back on,” said Bockian, who chooses a time slot when it’s not as crowded to prioritize the health of the elderly.

As Dinh sanitized a spa chair, a woman munching on an apple appeared, asking for an impromptu manicure. She did not need to wear a mask or sign any forms, she said, because she “works for the government and they don’t require us to do that, either.”

“I’m so sorry, Miss, we cannot provide you service,” Dinh, 22, responded. The stranger left, returning five minutes later, huffing behind a mask.

“You deal with all types of personalit­ies,” said Dinh, Luong’s eldest child, a nursing student. Growing up, she watched her mom accept short-term jobs doing nails in Arizona and North Carolina to support the family. Her machinist dad recently signed up for shifts every day to bring in income as an essential worker.

Her mother and father came from Vietnam’s central highlands of Da Lat, and after immigratin­g to the U.S. in their 20s, they discovered they were neighbors in Orange County. Luong’s family was sharing a bar of soap for personal grooming, her daughter recalled, “until my dad introduced them to shampoo and conditione­r. They didn’t even know what that was,” Dinh said. “And now, she’s running her own business.”

Sergio Martinez, an Auto Zone sales manager, and his wife, Diana, are regular customers. They, too, alluded to the dedication of the nail techs and the comforting air of the salon, saying, “We are welcomed sincerely, like family.”

“We need to give higher tips, all that time they were out of work,” said Martinez, 34, of Anaheim. As he settled back for his favorite treatment, a $26 deluxe pedicure complete with callous removal, sea salt treatment and massage, he noted: “It’s not the same when you have to clean your own toes. They get right in there.”

Kathy Ong, the employee working with his feet and a five-year nails veteran, said she “counted the days to return to the salon because staying at home means staying in an economic bind. You have few choices.”

A new study released by the California Healthy Nail Salon Collaborat­ive, partnering with the UCLA Labor Center, revealed that among more than 700 salon employees and owners surveyed during COVID-19, only 6% of owners were able to keep their workers on payroll.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? DAVID NGO works on the nails of Melissa Alatorre at the Captivate Nail Spa in Fullerton on Friday.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times DAVID NGO works on the nails of Melissa Alatorre at the Captivate Nail Spa in Fullerton on Friday.

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