The Commercial Appeal

Pandemic creates long waits for appliances

- Nedra Rhone Atlanta Journal-constituti­on TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

ATLANTA – Just a few weeks after closing on a new home in East Atlanta, Amy Miller and her husband decided to purchase a new washer and dryer. They ordered a top load washing machine and a dryer from Home Depot in mid-september, expecting the appliances to be delivered about a week after their scheduled move-in. But upon completing the order, they learned the appliances would take almost a month to get to their new home.

“When those dates came up, I was like are you kidding me?” Miller said. “I was taken aback. I was like how do they expect us to wash our clothes?”

Appliances are just one of many consumer items in short supply due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Industry experts said back orders remain high after manufactur­ing plants experience­d shutdowns, both in the U.S. and abroad. Increased demand and production slowdowns have resulted in six-to eight-week delays on some products, according to retailers.

“The customers are scratching their heads about how did COVID affect this?” said Jimmy Moore, a salesman at Bob Bailey’s Appliance store in Stone Mountain, Georgia. “When a plant shuts down, it never comes back up like it is supposed to. Now with social distancing, where they may have had 10 to 15 people on a line, now it is impossible ... you have five people doing that job.”

Moore noted a facility in North Carolina that churned out 1,000 dishwasher­s a day pre-pandemic but is now down to about 200 per day. “What was 5,000 at the end of the week is now only 1,000, so you are 4,000 in the hole,” he said.

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