The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Pandemic hammers small businesses vital to economic recovery

- ByPaulWise­man

WINCHESTER, VA. » In a normal year, hundreds of book loverswoul­d have descended on Winchester this summer for Shenandoah University’s annual children’s literature conference.

Some would have made their way to Christine Patrick’s bookshop downtown. Winchester Brew Works would have rolled out kegs this month for Oktoberfes­t revelers. The Hideaway Café, occupying a prime location at the corner of Cork and Loudoun streets, would be advertisin­g its monthly Divas Drag Show.

But 2020 is no normal year. The literature conference, Oktoberfes­t and drag shows have all been cancelled — casualties, like so much else, of COVID-19.

The pandemic has hammered small businesses across the United States — an alarming trend for an economy that’s trying to rebound fromthe deepest, fastest recession in U.S. history. Normally, small employers area vital source of hiring after a recession. They account for nearly half the economy’s output and an outsize portion of new jobs

“Small businesses are the engine of the economy,’’ said Ahu Yildirmaz, co-head of the ADP Research Institute, a think tank affiliated with the payroll processor ADP. “In past recessions, they were the ones really fueling the economy.’’

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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 inthe series “Small Business Struggles.”

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Roughly one in five small businesses have closed, according to the data firm Womply. Restaurant­s, bars, beauty shops and other retailers that involve face-to face contact have been hardest hit at a time when Americans are trying to keep distance from one another.

Small companies are struggling even here in a city of 28,000 that works hard to promote and preserve local enterprise­s. Founded in 1744 and fought over repeatedly during the Civil War, Winchester, 75 miles west of Washington, D.C., at the northern edge of the Shenandoah Valley, long ago blocked off several blocks to create a pedestrian mall downtown — a bulwark for local businesses that must compete against thebigbox stores on theoutskir­ts of town.

To encourage foot traffic at local businesses, Winchester even designed traffic lights to make it easier to traverse downtown on foot than by car, sometimes to the consternat­ion of motorists caught in stop-and-go traffic.

But city planning is no match foraglobal pandemic.

“We’re in such a weird, weird time,’’ saidMayor John David Smith Jr. “Small businesses and families are hurting.’’

Some Winchester businesses folded quietly in the spring, he said, choosing not to renew their leases. One was The German Table restaurant, which closed in April with this explanatio­n on its Facebook page from its owner:

“I am always a happy and positive person, but I really think that this virus will be kicking a lot of small businesses in the ass!! With no positive changes in sight, reopening in maybe 4- 6 months seems almost unrealisti­c.’’

Others are holding on. They’re receiving government aid and loans or readjustin­g their operations to reach customers online. Some are now offering curbside service and deliveries or are benefiting fromreside­nts who buy local to keep cherished Winchester businesses from going under.

When the pandemic struck in early spring, the American economy fell into a sickening freefall as businesses everywhere shuttered and consumers stayed home to avoid infection. The economy’s gross domestic product, the broadestme­asure of output, plummeted at a 31.4% annual pace from April through June. It was, by far, the worst three months on record dating to 1947.

Even though hiring partly rebounded as businesses began to reopen, the nation is still down 10.7 million jobs since February.

Lacking the credit access and cash stockpiles of larger companies, small businesses were especially vulnerable to the economy’s sudden stop. In a study in April, researcher­s from the University of Illinois, the University of Chicago andHarvard found that three-quarters of small businesses had only enough cash on hand to get by for two months.

Many crumpled under the pressure. Yelp, which publishes reviews of restaurant­s, bars and other businesses online, reports that nearly 164,000 businesses on its website have closed since March 1 — 98,000 of them permanentl­y.

Extrapolat­ing fromnumber­s provided by Yelp and Womply, Steven Hamilton, an economist at George Washington University, estimates that 420,000 U. S. small businesses had closed permanentl­y by July 10.

And small businesses’ troubles aren’t confined to their stressed- out owners. They generate nearly 44% of U. S. economic output, according to the Small Business Administra­tion, and account for two-thirds of new hiring. ( The SBA generally defines small businesses as those that employ no more than 500 workers.)

In addition to their economic impact, small businesses define communitie­s.

“Let’s talk about the tapestry of people and communitie­s,’’ said Andre Dua, a senior partner at the McKinsey consultanc­y, who has studied COVID-19’s impact on small businesses. “What is New York without its restaurant­s?’’

Or Brooklyn without its boutiques?

Diana Kane opened her clothing and jewelry shop on Brooklyn’s Fifth Avenue in 2002, years before that New York City borough was hip.

“The rents were inexpensiv­e,” she said. “The street was quiet and a little sketchy.’’

But the timing was right: “Fifth Avenue grew up around me.’’

Suddenly, the neighborho­od was bustling with shops, restaurant­s and bars. Then the pandemic struck, hitting New York hardest of all.

“We were the epicenter of the outbreak,” Kane said. “There were sirens literally nonstop. Everything was closed. We were in the depths of it.’’

And it all happened during her busy spring season. Her clothing sales evaporated — down 78% in April. She couldn’t persuade her landlord to agree to a rent reduction.

So she closed the Diana Kane Boutique in May.

Kane regrets the impact that her decision had on her customers, suppliers and neighbors.

“There are repercussi­ons all the way down the supply chain,’’ she said. “My money circulates in the community. .. The money I made went to pay for baseball, restaurant­s, bookstores, dry cleaning. It’s devastatin­g.’’

Across the country in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Leslie Moody is fighting to hold on to Rancho Gallina, the boutique hotel she opened in2013with­her husband. In January, they were looking forward to a banner year— forecastin­g $20,000 amonth in revenue from room bookings andwedding­s and other events.

“By theendofAp­ril, everything had cancelled or postponed,’’ Moody said.

The rescue aid program the federal government enacted inMarch helped them survive. In addition to their state jobless aid, she and her husband could each collect $600 a week in federal unemployme­nt benefits— until that programexp­ired July 31.

“That was themoney that meantwedid­n’t have tohold our breath every month,” Moody said. “Now we’re in breath-holding mode.’’

She, too, worries about how closing down would, in turn, hurt others.

“We bring a lot of income into the area,’’ she said. “For instance, there’s this really creative food truck company that caters all ourwedding­s.’’

And they buy produce from local farmers.

“It does trickle out, even though we’re a small business.’’

Government­s at all levels did scramble to protect small businesses. In addition to the expanded unemployme­nt aid, Congress approved the Paycheck Protection Program, which provided $520 billion for 5 million businesses, most of them small.

InWinchest­er, too, the city government offered small grants — Christine Patrick’s Winchester Book Gallery received $500 — and suspended parking fees to encourage shoppers to keep visiting the downtown pedestrian mall.

But Congress has failed to agree on another financial rescue. Without further federal aid — soon— economists­warn that the recovery will likely falter and intensify pressure on small businesses that are straining to survive.

“If we have to wait until January, an extremely large number of small businesses will fail,” Hamilton, the George Washington University economist, said at a Brookings Institutio­n conference last month. “In the hundreds of thousands ... We can’t last until January. That would be catastroph­ic.’’

To hang on, many small businesses have tried to reinvent the way they do business.

“Change comes from desperate firms trying new things,’’ said Giuseppe Gramigna, a small business consultant and former chief economist at the SBA.

 ?? STEVE HELBER ?? Pedestrian­s walk along the downtown mall area in the Old Town Wednesday Oct. 7, 2020, in Winchester, Va. The viral pandemic has hammered small businesses across the United States, an alarming trend for an economy that’s trying to rebound from the deepest, fastest recession in U.S. history. Small companies are struggling in Winchester, a city of 28,000that works hard to promote and preserve local enterprise­s.
STEVE HELBER Pedestrian­s walk along the downtown mall area in the Old Town Wednesday Oct. 7, 2020, in Winchester, Va. The viral pandemic has hammered small businesses across the United States, an alarming trend for an economy that’s trying to rebound from the deepest, fastest recession in U.S. history. Small companies are struggling in Winchester, a city of 28,000that works hard to promote and preserve local enterprise­s.
 ?? STEVE HELBER ?? Pedestrian­s walk along the downtown mall area Wednesday Oct. 7, 2020, in Winchester, Va. The viral pandemic has hammered small businesses across the United States, an alarming trend for an economy that’s trying to rebound from the deepest, fastest recession in U.S. history. Small companies are struggling in Winchester, a city of 28,000that works hard to promote and preserve local enterprise­s.
STEVE HELBER Pedestrian­s walk along the downtown mall area Wednesday Oct. 7, 2020, in Winchester, Va. The viral pandemic has hammered small businesses across the United States, an alarming trend for an economy that’s trying to rebound from the deepest, fastest recession in U.S. history. Small companies are struggling in Winchester, a city of 28,000that works hard to promote and preserve local enterprise­s.

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