The Mercury News

Businesses scramble for help as job openings go unfilled

Shortage hurts ability to keep up with demand

- By Joyce M. Rosenberg

NEW YORK >> It looks like something to celebrate: small businesses posting “Help Wanted” signs as the economy edges toward normalcy. Instead, businesses are having trouble filling the jobs, which in turn hurts their ability to keep up with demand for their products or services.

Owners say that some would-be workers are worried about catching COVID-19 or prefer to live off unemployme­nt benefits that are significan­tly higher amid the pandemic. Child care is another issue — parents aren’t able to work when they need to tend to or home-school their children. For some people, a combinatio­n of factors go into their decision not to seek work.

When Steve Klatt and Brandon Lapp set up interviews for their restaurant

and food truck business, they’re lucky if one out of 10 or 15 applicants comes in.

“The people who do show up, all assume their unemployme­nt is running out,” says Klatt, whose business, Braised in the South, is located in Johns Island, South Carolina. The maximum weekly unemployme­nt benefits in the state are $626 including $300 in federal coronaviru­s relief payments; in some states, maximum unemployme­nt is over $700 a week.

Klatt and Lapp need 20 people to run the business well but have only five staffers.

Former chefs, the owners and their wives are working in the kitchen and on the truck to keep things running. Klatt and Lapp recently decided to curtail their Sunday hours and close Mondays to give everyone a break.

“The hit to the bottom line will be noticeable, but it’s not worth burning out the few awesome people we do have working for us,” Klatt says.

Businesses of all sizes are struggling with hiring even with millions of Americans unemployed and as increasing numbers of people get vaccinated and look forward to a more normal life.

A Census survey taken in late March shows that 6.3 million didn’t seek work because they had to care for a child, and 4.1 million said they feared contractin­g or spreading the virus.

But smaller companies that often can’t offer pay and benefits as generous as larger companies have a tougher time.

“A shortage of talent is nothing new for small businesses, but the circumstan­ces surroundin­g this shortage are entirely different,” says Jill Chapman, a consultant with Insperity, a human resources provider.

The National Federation of Independen­t Business found in a March survey of its own members that 42% had job openings they couldn’t fill. Owners cited higher unemployme­nt benefits as one factor. And a study released last month by the National Bureau of Economic Research found that a 10% increase in unemployme­nt benefits during the pandemic led to a 3.6% drop in job applicatio­ns.

“Unemployme­nt benefits allow workers to be able

 ?? PHOTOS BY HANNAH ALBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Steve Klatt, left, and Brandon Lapp are owners of Braised in the South, a Johns Island, South Carolina, restaurant and food truck business that is having trouble finding workers during the pandemic.
PHOTOS BY HANNAH ALBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Steve Klatt, left, and Brandon Lapp are owners of Braised in the South, a Johns Island, South Carolina, restaurant and food truck business that is having trouble finding workers during the pandemic.
 ??  ?? Many small businesses, similar to Braised, find many wouldbe staffers fear contractin­g COVID-19 on the job or would prefer to live off unemployme­nt benefits.
Many small businesses, similar to Braised, find many wouldbe staffers fear contractin­g COVID-19 on the job or would prefer to live off unemployme­nt benefits.

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