Los Angeles Times

Nail- biting time for salons in Little Saigon

Things are ugly for the beauty business as pandemic leaves manicurist­s jobless

- By Anh Do

To toast a new year, Tina Vo usually travels to Las Vegas to “stuff my stomach” and try her luck at blackjack.

In her luggage, she packs essentials such as perfume, sequined dresses and strappy heels “that make me look much, much taller in photos,” said the customer services agent from Anaheim. Before taking off, her tanned skin would be vigorously massaged, her toes and fingernail­s buffed and painted crimson, her hair gleaming with brown ombre highlights.

Yet this winter, Vo is not as sparkling. She skipped her pampering rituals and her annual jaunt to Sin City.

The holiday season, normally a mainstay of the nearly $ 50- billion beauty industry, lost some of its luster heading into 2021, as California’s stay at- home orders intensifie­d.

Empty chairs now f ill Little Saigon, the Orange County nail salon capital of the U. S., as pandemic restrictio­ns not only left

countless manicurist­s out of work but also slashed the incomes of aesthetici­ans, herbalists, massage therapists, barbers and plastic surgeons, many growing desperate.

Even before wrapping up the most glamorous season of the year, workers say that business is down by as much as two- thirds, while the regulars primping themselves with scrubs or treatments have virtually disappeare­d. The ongoing shutdown, some say, has conjured an economic nightmare worse than last spring.

Salon owners say their financial troubles began with the initial statewide shutdown in March, when Gov. Gavin Newsom blamed a Northern California nail salon for being ground zero of community transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s. His assertions proved to be false, but for plenty of immigrants in the largest Vietnamese business district outside Vietnam, the damage done by his statements has multiplied.

Last month, citing nearzero availabili­ty of intensive care unit beds, state and health officials extended COVID- 19 restrictio­ns in Southern California indefinite­ly, ordering hair and nail salons, along with churches, entertainm­ent centers, museums and zoos, to remain closed.

“It’s like watching a horror movie. What used to be a handful of customers coming through the salons I go to has — poof — disappeare­d. There’s no energy, no liveliness,” said Vo, 25. “My friends employed there tell me that people pray for good news while they’ve been mourning like they’re at the cemetery.”

Vo’s cousin Kim Stevens, who has delayed a cosmetic procedure on her eyelids, said she and family members are more worried about “exposing ourselves to germs at medical offices.” That’s why even though she bargained with the staff at a Westminste­r practice for a good price — gaining 20% off by paying cash for surgery — she will “think twice” about proceeding.

Stevens, 30, of Irvine, is hoping that the money she saves by postponing her surgery might allow her “more beauty options later in 2021, if not in 2022.”

Workers say the holiday season showed how the pandemic’s trickle- down effects have upended the beauty sector. Nga Nguyen, 56, a hairstylis­t for more than two decades, says her days now are spent “cleaning and recleaning.”

“What else is there to do?” said the Santa Ana mother, who works at My Ngoc in Westminste­r.

“People don’t make themselves look good, because there’s nowhere to go. This holiday, there haven’t been parties. There’s no need to buy clothes, so why would they need to f ix their hair or do a makeover?

“I’m so scared for our near future and our longterm future in our field.”

Demi Quynh, who trained at Advance Beauty College in Garden Grove, helps manage Revive Health Spa in Huntington Beach with a roster of clients from Little Saigon. “This is the season where we sell lots of gift cards, but people aren’t buying,” said the massage therapist, who’s in her 30s. “Some of us are thinking of looking for work in a factory. Always on our mind is the thought of survival.”

She said spa and salon workers have made safety a top priority, and she’s never without a mask when on the clock.

“I’m covered up and the customer is also covered when I turn them over to massage another spot. But with a facial, well, facials are no longer in demand,” Quynh said. “So many of us place hope in the [ COVID- 19] vaccine. Who knows when the vaccine will be widespread?”

Though industry workers worry about the drasticall­y decreased seasonal clientele, analysts and business owners say employees started departing at the end of the summer, frantic to f ind other jobs. Some have turned to family members to borrow money or help pay their bills.

“First, the owners were overjoyed to be able to set up hair or nails stations outdoors, since it’s less risky to be outdoors. They did sacrifice to invest in a new way of doing business. Yet after spending that money, they have to close again and again,” said Hai Thanh La, executive vice president of Merchant Service Group, a payment processing company that manages more than 5,000 beauty salon accounts, including hundreds owned by Vietnamese Americans.

“The beauty industry is different from the restaurant industry. A restaurant doesn’t have to be fancy to be successful. But a salon has to be pretty because people go there to be pretty,” he added. “Therefore, the pressure and the costs to consistent­ly adapt during a health crisis are immense.”

Beauty business owners say they have outspent their resources trying to respond to ever- changing pandemic rules, especially when it comes to sanitation standards.

Cosmetolog­y student Darren Luu, who’s eager to earn his license, is nearing completion of the 1,600 class hours required to take the test administer­ed by the state Board of Barbering and Cosmetolog­y. But there’s a catch. The pandemic has stalled the scheduling of exams, which may not restart until August.

“It’s distressin­g to think of the delay, yet we live in reality. What choice do we have but to wait?” said Luu, a Garden Grove resident. He has a promising career ahead of him—he finished third in Supercuts’ 2020 Student Styling Online Photo Competitio­n — but said that launching it will require months of patience.

“It kind of sucks, yeah. People aren’t going out; they aren’t taking photos to show what they’re doing. The person who wants to look nice can’t — and the person who wants to help them look nice has no opportunit­y to do so,” he said.

The one bright spot during stay- at- home orders is that, for the first time, officials from the Board of Barbe ring and Cosmetolog­y have pivoted to allow virtual instructio­n for students, balancing 25% in- school courses with 75% online.

“It’s unpreceden­ted,” said Linh Nguyen, vice president of Advance Beauty College, which has branches in Little Saigon and Laguna Hills. “It’s not ideal, because at home you practice on mannequins and you have to do nails on fake hands or doll hair instead of having a live person. But at least your learning isn’t stalled.”

What pains profession­als in the beauty business is seeing their clients migrate to other workers “offering services undergroun­d” or staying open by a “side door,” Nguyen said.

“They look at social media and people post about how happy they are getting haircuts and you know that you’re losing customers. Sometimes, you can’t blame them because they do need to get things done,” Nguyen added. “Still, it’s heartbreak­ing.”

As consumers and retailers prepare for the Lunar New Year and Valentine’s Day — and with officials emphasizin­g the necessity of maintainin­g good health during a pandemic — it’s more important than ever for the industry to make its services readily available, workers say.

“This is a time when we should be booming — health in outer appearance and inner nutrition,” said Suzette ChristianM­arch etti, Advance Beauty College’s director of partnershi­ps.

As for Vo, the casino aficionado, New Year’s Eve found her in pajamas that she ordered online, with dreams of a return to the glitzy Venetian Las Vegas hotel in a not- too- distant future.

“Hopefully, I can try another hair color by then,” she said. “I want the workers to get paid.”

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? DEMI QUYNH, a massage therapist, helps manage a health spa in Huntington Beach with clients from nearby Little Saigon. “This is the season where we sell lots of gift cards, but people aren’t buying,” she said.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times DEMI QUYNH, a massage therapist, helps manage a health spa in Huntington Beach with clients from nearby Little Saigon. “This is the season where we sell lots of gift cards, but people aren’t buying,” she said.
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? MASSAGE THERAPIST Demi Quynh makes a bed at Revive Health Spa in Huntington Beach. “Some of us are thinking of looking for work in a factory,” she said. “Always on our mind is the thought of survival.”
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times MASSAGE THERAPIST Demi Quynh makes a bed at Revive Health Spa in Huntington Beach. “Some of us are thinking of looking for work in a factory,” she said. “Always on our mind is the thought of survival.”

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