Santa Fe New Mexican

Calls to support Black Lives Matter, ‘buy black’ giving businesses much-needed boost

- By Jordyn Holman and Gerald Porter Jr.

At Breukelen Coffee House in Brooklyn, business is booming, at least by pandemic standards. Regulars have started to return — with masks, of course — but owner Frank Warren has noted an uptick in unfamiliar faces, too. After taking a 90 percent hit during shelter-in-place orders, sales jumped 30 percent last week.

He suspects the surge isn’t just because the city is coming back to life, but the result of renewed calls to support Black Lives Matter along with black-owned shops like his. “This couldn’t happen at a better time for us,” Warren said. Over the last few months, he had relied on takeout to keep him afloat. “But then you add this? My gut tells me 50 percent more tips, at least.”

Following weeks of protests, the fight for racial justice after a police officer killed George Floyd by kneeling on his neck for nearly nine minutes has taken on many forms. Among them are calls for consumers to “Buy Black” as a corrective to economic inequaliti­es black business owners face. Lists of coffee shops, eateries and retailers to patronize have gone viral on Twitter and Instagram. One post that touted Breukelen has more than 45,000 likes. Official Black Wall Street, an app that curates black-owned retailers, got 8,000 downloads and more than 30,000 Instagram followers just last week.

The movement has been a lifeline for some of the hardest-hit entreprene­urs navigating a devastatin­g health and economic crisis. Between February and April, 41 percent of black businesses shut their doors for good, compared to 17 percent of white businesses, a paper published in the National Bureau of Economic Research found. Black and Latino entreprene­urs receive only 1 percent of startup funding, and many black business owners didn’t initially qualify or receive government assistance during the pandemic. Black proprietor­s say they have to fight against the perception from customers and investors that they’re second-rate.

“There remains an economic divide between black and white America,” Sen. Ben Cardin of Maryland said at an oversight hearing Wednesday on the Paycheck Protection Program. Cardin, the top Democrat on the Small Business & Entreprene­urship Committee, said he’s pushing the Trump administra­tion to provide more data to ensure black-owned small businesses aren’t getting left behind.

“A lot of black founders knew that [the pandemic] could potentiall­y seal their fate,” said Amira Rasool, who runs a retailer that sells luxury apparel from African designers. “They could potentiall­y be put out of business, and not because they didn’t have a great product or because something was wrong with the way they ran their business. Everybody knows that when it rains in certain areas, it pours in others.”

Rasool, who launched her company in 2018, was in the process of raising capital before the pandemic hit. Sales slowed and the 24-year-old entreprene­ur considered taking on a second job to help pay the bills. Then, at the beginning of the month, a week into the protests, her fate started to change.

“My phone kept going off,” she said. It was her Shopify account alerting her to incoming orders. In the last week, she’s seen seven times her usual sales. Her social media accounts were blowing up, too. The company’s Instagram followers doubled to 10,000 in just a week. She’s spent the last few days responding to comments and packing up boxes of merchandis­e to ship.

“This has the potential to save a lot of companies that would have not made it through the effects of the pandemic,” Rasool said.

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