'Upside down again': Omicron surge roils U.S. small businesses
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[January 17, 2022]
By Brad Brooks and Jonathan Allen
LUBBOCK, Texas (Reuters) - Phillip Howard pointed
toward a stack of black ski pants piled atop a counter in his winter
sports shop as evidence of the hurdles small business owners still face
as the pandemic drags on.
The pants were supposed to arrive by August at Troy's Ski Lubbock shop
in west Texas - well before his five-month hot season of selling that
kicks off in October. Instead, they came from China the first week of
January, delayed by supply-chain failures.
"Late-arriving product really kills us," Howard said this week, noting
that several other items had also arrived late, missing his pre-holiday
sales season. "I've been in this business for almost 20 years, and I've
never encountered anything like this."
As the pandemic enters its third year, many small businesses across the
United States are besieged on three fronts: deepening supply chain
issues; periodic staffing shortages; and fewer customers showing up in
some areas, fearing the Omicron spike in COVID-19 cases.
This week the Federal Reserve released its latest collection of
anecdotes about the state of the economy from businesses, labor groups
and others nationwide, showing that the fast-spreading Omicron variant
was exacerbating difficulties, especially for hiring and inflation.
U.S. retail sales fell 1.9% in December amid the shortage of goods and
surging infections, the Commerce Department said on Friday.
Though federal aid and the economy's overall recovery have kept failure
and bankruptcy rates for small businesses far lower than expected,
day-to-day management has become a challenge. Census surveys conducted
since early in the pandemic show concerns steadily shifting from
dwindling cash reserves and a hunt for financing to challenges with
supply chains and rising costs.
"I'm placing orders for next year now, and we're looking at double-digit
inflation," Howard said. "It's probably 10% across the board for almost
everything that I'm having to order."
'UPSIDE DOWN AGAIN'
Staffing shortages forced Gage & Tollner, a 19th-century chop house in
Brooklyn, New York, to close for five days in late December.
Co-owner St. John Frizell estimates about 30% of the nearly 60 people
working at the restaurant have had COVID-19 in the last month. Owners
wanted staff to have a negative coronavirus test before returning to
work, but that often meant employees spent hours waiting in lines to get
swabbed.
"We just need tests, lots and lot of tests," he said.
He welcomed the proposal this month by Governor Kathy Hochul that New
York should permanently allow restaurants and bars to sell cocktails "to
go," an emergency provision first brought in when establishments were
forbidden from seating customers inside in 2020.
Just down the road at Junior's Restaurant and Bakery - renowned for its
cheesecakes - owner Alan Rosen said he had suffered with supply chain
issues and staffing shortages. He has sometimes had to rope off entire
sections of his restaurants when there were not enough servers to go
around.
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Phillip Howard poses for a photo inside his Troy's Ski Lubbock shop,
in Lubbock, Texas, January 14, 2022. Picture taken January 14, 2022.
Howard says supply chain woes are making life extremely difficult
for small business owners like himself. REUTERS/Brad Brooks
"Our costs of goods are through the
roof, there's inflationary pressure, supply chains are a mess,"
Rosen said.
Amy Glosser shifted BYKlyn, her cycling studio, to
new outdoor premises in the summer of 2020 to keep the Brooklyn
business afloat. But Glosser said she and her two dozen employees
agreed they could not do another winter outdoors, so she moved the
business to a temporary indoor space on Dec. 1.
Then the Omicron variant hit New York City hard, and about 40% of
the gym's 200 members said they wanted to cancel or pause their
memberships.
"People are nervous to come inside and sweat together," Glosser
said.
Randy Peers, president of the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, said
he's worried about small businesses being evicted after New York
state's pandemic-era evictions moratorium ended on Saturday, noting
that about a third of businesses in the Chamber owe back rent.
Peers said optimism grew over the summer and early fall, with the
city's high vaccination rates and many restrictions lifted. That
lasted through Thanksgiving.
"Then Omicron just threw everything upside down again," he said.
'HOLDING OUR BREATH'
Small businesses in states where COVID restrictions have been far
looser than New York say customers are still coming out, but other
pandemic issues continue to plague them.
Mark Pectol, who owns four Zesty Zzeeks Pizza & Wings shops in the
Phoenix metro area, said he never dreamed his biggest nightmare as a
small business owner would come in the form of supply chain issues.
"I don't know if I'm going to have pizza boxes at the end of the
week," he said. "If I don't have pizza boxes - I'm going out of
business. We're just holding our breath."
Even if he can get pizza boxes, Pectol said he's already getting
warnings about a possible flour shortage next.
That would be cruelly ironic. In the first year of the pandemic,
when grocery stores could not keep flour on shelves, Pectol said he
could still buy it in bulk from his supplier. While his stores were
closed under pandemic restrictions, he kept money coming in by
selling 140,000 pounds of flour to the public.
Now, the fickleness of the supply chain failures may be turning on
him.
"My distributor told me they have flour for me for a month. But this
week, they didn't get any flour in at all," he said. "If I can't get
it from a big distributor, where will I get it?"
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Lubbock, Texas, and Jonathan Allen in
New York; Additional reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by
Colleen Jenkins and Alistair Bell)
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