Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Businesses struggle near parks

- By Will Graves

The cathedrals lie empty. Wrigley. Fenway. Yankee Stadium.

Sure, their lights are on as Major League Baseball tries to squeeze in a truncated 60-game season in the middle of a pandemic. Butno one ishomesave for a few dozen players running around in masks under the din of artificial crowd noise in front of a handful of well-positioned cardboard cutouts.

Step outside the gates, and the artifice evaporates. Reality sets in.

AsMLBsprin­ts through two months trying to provide a small semblance of normalcy to its fan base and much-needed fresh content to its broadcast partners, the businesses in the neighborho­ods surroundin­g the stadiums that rely so heavily on thousands making their way through the turnstiles 81 times a year are struggling, their futuresmur­kyat best.

It’s those kinds of businesses that serve as the lifeblood near those parks.

“We rely on that 40,000fan-a-game foot traffic and seasonal tourism each year in order for us to be successful, and unfortunat­ely all of us right noware witnessing what life is like on the polar opposite side of that,” said Cristina McAloon, the director of retail for Wrigleyvil­le Sports.

Outside Fenway Park, parking spaces that go for $60during aRedSoxhom­e game can be had for $10 now. The pop-up village on Jersey Street that organicall­y materializ­es from April through September has vanished. Souvenir shops stand idle. The postgame crowd that flows in singing“Sweet Caroline” under their breath is back homewatchi­ng onTV.

 ?? CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP ?? Pedestrian traffic nearWrigle­y Field, is almost non existent before a Sept. 8 Cubs game.
CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP Pedestrian traffic nearWrigle­y Field, is almost non existent before a Sept. 8 Cubs game.

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