Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

‘We’re basically wiped out’

Small businesses struggle to survive

- ADAM GELLER

EDITOR’S NOTE: Small businesses around the world are fighting for survival amid the economic fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic. Whether they make it will affect not just local economies but the fabric of communitie­s. Associated Press journalist­s tell their stories in the series “Small Business Struggles.”

Hour after hour in the dark, Chander Shekhar’s mind raced ahead to morning.

More than three months had dragged by since the coronaviru­s forced him to shut down his business — a shop racked with vibrantly colored saris, on a block in New York’s Jackson Heights neighborho­od once thronged with South Asian immigrant shoppers. Today, finally, merchants were allowed to open their doors.

But they were returning to an area where covid-19 had killed hundreds, leaving sidewalks desolate and storefront­s to gather dust. Overnight, the uncertaint­ies of opening had woken Shekhar nine times.

“This is an invisible enemy that nobody can see,” said Shekhar, who is anxious about the $6,000 monthly rent at his store, Shopno Fashion. “I have worked hard for this for more than 20 years, then I got my shop. It’s not easy to leave it.”

The pandemic’s toll leaves Shekhar reluctant to complain, and he knows he is not alone. As economies around the world open, small businesses that help define and sustain neighborho­ods are struggling. The stakes are high: The U.N. estimates that businesses with fewer than 250 workers account for two-thirds of employment worldwide.

Many acknowledg­e that opening is just the beginning. But it is a critical milestone, a testament to their grit, creativity and some desperatio­n. It’s about finding whatever works, because now there is no such thing as business as usual.

In 15 years as a London bookseller, Jane Howe never saw the need for a website.

On weekends, shoppers packed the tidy Broadway Bookshop, drawn by the store’s personaliz­ed service.

“I think of it as a dinner table, and I lay everything out, these delicious dishes for people to take and try,” Howe said. “It’s going to be very difficult to replace online.”

The coronaviru­s didn’t leave much choice. With foot traffic on the Broadway Market way down and distancing rules in place, it made little sense to open. Howe let go of three parttime staffers, tried to negotiate a rent reduction, and borrowed 50,000 pounds from the government.

In mid-June, she launched a website. In the first week, the site took in 28% of pre-pandemic sales. In July, she began selling books from the store’s doorstep.

“I’m going to give it my best shot for the next 18 months, and then I don’t know what will happen after that if we don’t break even,” she said. “I’m hoping we come out of this in a year’s time … all I can do is hope we will.”

— BY SYLVIA HUI IN LONDON

DJ Johnson’s new NOLA Art Bar was filled with customers sipping cocktails on a midMarch evening when the announceme­nt came: The city had ordered all bars to close. Johnson turned up the lights, asked everyone to leave and boarded the door.

Six weeks later, he adapted to rules allowing restaurant­s to stay open for takeout. His bar didn’t do food. But he started making New Orleans staples like boiled shrimp, taking orders at a table in the gallery’s doorway on St. Claude Avenue. The first day he made $35.

“The more I can get the word out, the better it will be for me when things are able to reopen, post-covid,” he said. “So just weather

the storm.”

On June 13, Johnson started seating diners inside at half capacity. A week later, he restarted constructi­on on a bookstore and coffee shop next door. He’s still trying to figure out what a recent decision by Louisiana’s governor to close bars for in-person service as coronaviru­s cases spike means for his business. But he’s determined to keep going, even if it means going back to selling to passersby at his gallery’s door.

For motivation, he recalls biographie­s of people like Nelson Mandela, as models for overcoming adversity.

“It’s discouragi­ng. But the only thing that kept me going is, there is no quit,” he said. “You go until you can’t go anymore.”

— BY REBECCA SANTANA IN NEW ORLEANS

Over the years, Stephanie Skoglund invested countless hours of sweat equity renovating what was once a general store in Tenino, Wash., for use as a wedding hall.

This year, 40 celebratio­ns were already on the calendar at The Vault and its sister facility. Then the coronaviru­s shut them down. “We’re basically wiped out,” Skoglund said. Skoglund turned off the electric circuits and water lines. She sold a dance floor for $1,000 and a large party tent for $2,600, to help cover her family’s bills.

Opening, if you can call it that, has proved just as tough.

In June, people started calling to rent tables and tents for outdoor events, Skoglund’s only revenue so far. She’ll host her first wedding in late July. With 80 guests, distancing should not be an issue in a hall that accommodat­es 299.

She’s hoping business solidifies by October. But she and her husband have talked about selling their home and businesses if it doesn’t.

“I have to start thinking about how to save what I do have and not put myself in a financial position where I lose it,” she said. “Just making that decision: what’s my next step? That’s what keeps me up at night.”

— BY GENE JOHNSON IN TENINO, WASHINGTON

At the end of his store’s first day back, New York’s Chander Shekhar tallied the results — four customers and $200 in sales. He needed $700 to cover costs and turn a small profit.

But that would take time, Shekhar reasoned. With people staying home and special events on hold, few needed new saris or jewelry repair. It might take the reassuranc­e of a vaccine to bring shoppers back in full, he said.

Still, it was “not a bad beginning.” And for the first night in far too long, that was enough to allow his mind some rest.

 ?? (AP/Ted S. Warren) ?? Stephanie Skoglund touches up paint on a giant chalkboard where guests can leave messages for the bride and groom at The Vault, the wedding and event center she owns in Tenino, Wash. The board still bears the names — Kyzer and Sandra — of the last couple to be married at the venue in March before the coronaviru­s outbreak forced them to close their doors.
(AP/Ted S. Warren) Stephanie Skoglund touches up paint on a giant chalkboard where guests can leave messages for the bride and groom at The Vault, the wedding and event center she owns in Tenino, Wash. The board still bears the names — Kyzer and Sandra — of the last couple to be married at the venue in March before the coronaviru­s outbreak forced them to close their doors.
 ?? (AP/Alberto Pezzali) ?? Tom, shop manager of Broadway Bookshop, hands off a book order to a customer June 18 outside the shop in Broadway Market, Hackney, in east London. The business started a website in June and converted to collect and delivery to cope with the lockdown measures due to the coronaviru­s outbreak.
(AP/Alberto Pezzali) Tom, shop manager of Broadway Bookshop, hands off a book order to a customer June 18 outside the shop in Broadway Market, Hackney, in east London. The business started a website in June and converted to collect and delivery to cope with the lockdown measures due to the coronaviru­s outbreak.
 ?? (AP/Mark Lennihan) ?? Zakaria Masud (left) works in his Queens travel agency after it opened during the coronaviru­s pandemic in New York’s Jackson Heights neighborho­od. “I think we’re losing 50% of the revenue. But I think we can survive,” said Masud.
(AP/Mark Lennihan) Zakaria Masud (left) works in his Queens travel agency after it opened during the coronaviru­s pandemic in New York’s Jackson Heights neighborho­od. “I think we’re losing 50% of the revenue. But I think we can survive,” said Masud.
 ?? (AP/Marshall Ritzel) ?? Chander Shekhar, co-owner of Shopno Fashion in New York’s Jackson Heights neighborho­od, poses for a portrait on June 22, the first day of New York City’s “Phase Two” opening plan. This neighborho­od was hit particular­ly hard by covid-19, and shops were opening for the first time in more than three months.
(AP/Marshall Ritzel) Chander Shekhar, co-owner of Shopno Fashion in New York’s Jackson Heights neighborho­od, poses for a portrait on June 22, the first day of New York City’s “Phase Two” opening plan. This neighborho­od was hit particular­ly hard by covid-19, and shops were opening for the first time in more than three months.
 ??  ?? Patrons relax over cocktails in the velvet chairs of DJ Johnson’s NOLA Art Bar in New Orleans on June 23. In mid-March, the city ordered all bars to close to avoid the spread of the coronaviru­s. On June 13, Johnson was able to start seating diners inside the gallery at half capacity. He makes constant rounds of the room, distributi­ng hand sanitizer. Gradually, customers are beginning to trickle in. “It’s discouragi­ng. But the only thing that kept me going is, there is no quit,” he said. (AP/Gerald Herbert)
Patrons relax over cocktails in the velvet chairs of DJ Johnson’s NOLA Art Bar in New Orleans on June 23. In mid-March, the city ordered all bars to close to avoid the spread of the coronaviru­s. On June 13, Johnson was able to start seating diners inside the gallery at half capacity. He makes constant rounds of the room, distributi­ng hand sanitizer. Gradually, customers are beginning to trickle in. “It’s discouragi­ng. But the only thing that kept me going is, there is no quit,” he said. (AP/Gerald Herbert)

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