A California cafe reopens with a payroll loan, but the
future unclear
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[May 18, 2020] By
Ann Saphir
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Chris and Amy
Hillyard opened their Oakland, California restaurant late last month for
the first time since mid-March, thanks in large part to a government
loan aimed at tiding over small firms during the worst of the
coronavirus crisis.
The loan, part of the $2.3 trillion economic relief package passed by
Congress in late March, is designed to cover two months' worth of
payroll, rent and utilities for firms with fewer than 500 employees.
But the Hillyards' once-crowded restaurant, Farley's East, is now a
takeout operation that needs fewer than half its former staff, at least
through the end of May when the San Francisco region's stay-at-home
order is due to expire.
Even then dine-in seating is likely to be curtailed to limit the virus'
spread, and grave doubts remain over how quickly consumer spending
decimated by an unprecedented surge in unemployment could pick back up.
Customers who used to work nearby have told Chris that even when their
office buildings do reopen, they expect to continue to do their jobs
mostly from home.
"Our business will fundamentally change as a result of this, long term,"
Chris says. "We have eight weeks to figure out how to make it work."
The Hillyard's restaurant is one of millions of small businesses in the
United States facing an uncertain future after the new coronavirus shut
down shops, restaurants, schools and travel in the world's biggest
consumer economy. Over the next 12 months, Reuters will chronicle the
journey of several small businesses owners around the U.S.
The Hillyards' business is among more than 4.3 million U.S. companies to
receive so-called paycheck protection program loans.
The idea is simple: to help small businesses keep on their employees
during coronavirus shutdowns so that on the other side they'll be able
to quickly resume normal operations.
In practice it was not so straightforward.
The program opened on April 3 with an initial $349 billion in funding.
The rollout was marred by technical glitches as many of the nation's 30
million small businesses tried to access the cash.
The money was exhausted within two weeks. Congress added an additional
$310 billion to the program in late April, of which about $191 billion
has been allocated so far.
The Hillyards had shut down Farley's East in Oakland and their small San
Francisco cafe, Farley's, on March 17 when the region's stay-at-home
order came down. They laid off all 40 employees.
"We had to pause and just take a step back and figure out how we're
going to get out of this hole that we're in financially," Chris said. It
was "a pretty depressing situation."
They applied for a PPP loan on April 6.
[to top of second column] |
Makenna Hillyard, 13, checks a to-go order at Farley's East in
Oakland, California, U.S. April 16, 2020. The cafe temporarily
closed during the shelter-in-place but returned first to sell
meals-to-go and later reopened its cafe on April 29, 2020 with the
help of the paycheck protection program, part of the $2.3 trillion
economic relief package passed by Congress in late March. Picture
taken April 16, 2020. REUTERS/Nathan Frandino
Meanwhile they launched several new business lines to generate at least some
revenue, including weekly "family meals" like biscuits and chicken, prepared by
their own family of four, for a few dozen customers. They also made meals for
emergency room workers and the homeless through partnerships with local
nonprofit groups.
All told, they pulled in about $15,000 for their efforts, compared with their
typical pre-crisis monthly sales of $200,000.
On April 23, the $221,000 PPP loan hit the Hillyards' bank account. It was one
of 345 loans totaling $83.5 million made under the program by Community Bank of
the Bay, a community development financial institution.
"It was a huge relief," Chris said. "I'm feeling a little more optimistic about
our plans going forward and that we have a plan in place to try to get out of
this situation."
The Hillyards had opened a takeout window at Farley's a few days earlier, and
with the new loan quickly rehired 15 employees to reboot Farley's East on April
29.
The first day's sales of salads and lattes through a newly installed plexiglass-shielded
takeout window were "good, not great," Chris said. Since then revenue has
remained where it was that first day: about 20% of the pre-crisis norm, before
office buildings that surround his establishment emptied out so workers could do
their jobs from home.
The Hillyards plan to use the $221,000 to cover payroll, rent and utilities
through late June, and expect most to be eligible for forgiveness under the
terms of the program.
They plan to cover other expenses - including past-due payments to vendors and
interest on a years-ago remodeling loan - with income from the reopened shop
that now also sells provisions like flour, coconut chia pudding and eggs, with
now twice-weekly family meals, and plans for a new line of deli offerings
catering to people who live nearby.
Still, once the PPP loan runs out, it's not clear what is in store.
The loan provides "a little bit of a financial runway to change our business
models" to match the pandemic economy, Amy said. For now, she says, "we are
trying not to think about whether or not we are going to make money."
(Additional reporting by Nathan Frandino; Editing by Heather Timmons and Diane
Craft)
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