From 'congratulations' to 'fully canceled': California cafe owners hit
roadblock
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[July 23, 2021] By
Ann Saphir
(Reuters) - After more than a year of heavy
losses at their two cafes in the San Francisco Bay Area, Amy and Chris
Hillyard were relieved to get word in May that they'd been approved for
a $381,000 grant from the U.S. Small Business Administration.
The money was from a fund earmarked by Congress for restaurants hurt by
the economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic, like the Hillyards'
Farley's SF and Farley's East operations.
Equal to their losses last year, it would let the couple pay back debt,
hire new employees, expand opening hours, replace a broken freezer, buy
tables and chairs for outdoor dining, and do all the other things Chris
Hillyard says need to get done "to get back to normal and be ready for
normal, come September," when more workers might be expected to return
to nearby office buildings.
Then, last month, the Hillyards learned they won't get the money after
all.
"We are back in a holding pattern" Chris Hillyard said. "It's not a very
fun place to be."
Even after roughly $800 billion in aid from the federal Paycheck
Protection Program (PPP) and nearly $30 billion more earmarked for
hard-hit restaurants this year, small U.S. businesses face an uncertain
outlook.
Many enterprises that were thriving before the pandemic are still
hobbled.
At the same time, a widely predicted wave of bankruptcies has not
materialized, with commercial bankruptcies in 2020 at their lowest level
in five years and year-to-date filings lower still, according to data
provider Epiq AACER.
Complicating the picture are regional discrepancies.
Some 35% of San Francisco Bay Area establishments like those of the
Hillyards still report a large negative impact from the pandemic and
more than 41% think it will take more than another six months to return
to normal, a U.S. Census Bureau survey from mid-July shows. Meanwhile,
in Atlanta, only 21% and 31%, respectively, of respondents reported the
same concerns.
That suggests a genuine national recovery may be some ways off.
"The problem is for the economy, the pandemic has gone on longer than we
thought, and it looks like different industries and different
geographies have been affected very differently," said Karen Dynan, an
economics professor at Harvard University. "It's just another reason
that we are not going to see the economy go back to full employment
overnight."
NOT BACK TO NORMAL
Reuters has been following the Hillyards and their cafe business since
March 2020, when they laid off their entire staff after California shut
down all "non-essential" businesses. They reopened six weeks later with
a PPP loan, got through the summer with help from donors like Golden
State Warriors basketball star Stephen Curry, and pulled through the
winter viral surge and renewed government curbs on business with a
second PPP loan.
But despite the state's decision to end all pandemic-era restrictions in
mid-June, Farley's in San Francisco is making only 70% of its
pre-pandemic sales. Farley's East in Oakland - the bigger operation of
the two - is at just 40%, and any hope for improvement depends on how
businesses manage their employees' return to offices.
"I think the service sector that supported the downtown work community
is one we should be worried about it," Dynan said, because many
businesses will likely allow at least some remote work in the
post-pandemic period. "Breakfast places, lunch shops, dry cleaners,
pharmacies downtown - they are just not going to see demand that's as
robust."
[to top of second column] |
Chris and Amy Hillyard, owners of Farley’s East, pack lunches for
World Central Kitchen, amid the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak, in
Oakland, California, U.S., July 1, 2020. REUTERS/Nathan Frandino/File
Photo
The Hillyards have spent the $520,000 in federal aid they received, most of it
on payroll for their 20 employees.
The latest grant the Hillyards were counting on was part of the $1.9 trillion
pandemic relief package passed by Congress and signed by President Joe Biden in
March, which included $28.6 billion for restaurants that lost money during the
pandemic.
By the time the restaurant fund had run out, the owners of 278,000 restaurants
had applied. Some 101,000 got grants ranging from as large as $10 million to as
small as $1,000, critical support for one of the sectors hardest hit by the
pandemic.
The Hillyards were relieved to be among them.
"Congratulations," the May 18 email from the SBA read. "Your SBA Restaurant
Revitalization Fund application has been approved." It continued, "The SBA will
now process the funding of this award directly to your Bank account within 3-7
business days from this notification."
Weeks went by. The Hillyards made inquiries. "Be assured the award funds are
reserved for those applications that have been fully approved and will be sent,"
one SBA portal response reviewed by Reuters said.
On June 23, Chris Hillyard received another email from the SBA. "We regret to
inform you that, due to recent court rulings, the SBA will not be able to
disburse your Restaurant Revitalization Fund award," it read.
A legal group founded by Stephen Miller and Mark Meadows, who held senior
positions in former President Donald Trump's White House, had sued the SBA in
Texas, arguing that the Biden administration’s efforts to prioritize applicants
on the basis of race and gender was unconstitutional.
On June 11, the court barred the SBA from handing out any more of the funds to
priority applicants like Farley's, which is majority woman-owned because of Amy
Hillyard's larger share in the business.
"In coming days ... you will see the status of your application in SBA’s portal
change to 'fully canceled,'" the June 23 email said. Some 2,964 other restaurant
owners got similar notices, SBA said. A spokesperson for the SBA said the agency
was "frustrated" with the outcome and remains committed to helping disadvantaged
businesses.
The Independent Restaurant Coalition, a U.S. trade group which lobbied to get
the grant program into the pandemic relief bill in the first place, is now
trying to convince Congress to replenish the program's funds.
To the Hillyards, that's cold comfort, even as the economy as a whole, despite
the rising tide of COVID-19 infections, surges back to life. Their cafes
continue to lose money each month.
"Everything is going back to normal - but our business is not back to normal,
and it's going to take us a lot longer to get there," Chris Hillyard said.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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