Small Businesses Dealt Another Blow
When most of the
region was shut down because of too much ice and not enough water, Bozz
Baucum, the owner of Marilynn’s Place and Ralph’s Place in Shreveport,
wasn’t. He was at work boiling water in his commercial crawfish rig to
cook meals for teenagers at the Rutherford House.
The
boys in the group home had gone for nearly a week with no hot shower
and no hot meal, and Bozz knew at the very least he could provide hot
sandwiches and steaming bowls of soup. During the icy days that
followed, Baucum cooked food for several divisions of Shreveport Police,
for widows in a Catholic church program and for elderly residents who
were alone and without food, water and support at area senior living
facilities.
Bozz
would be the last to call his small business heroic, but he would call
it a neighbor and his kind of neighborliness was alive and well here.
Small businesses and restaurants, the same small businesses and
restaurants just barely hanging on after a year of Covid losses, saw
what was needed during the winter storm and jumped in to provide it.
Covid
was brutal on small businesses, the people who own them and those who
depend on them for a living. Local businesses of all types suffered
terribly during the wild and wooly months of online shopping and
restaurant restrictions during Covid stay-athome orders.
Locally,
businesses have failed, and others are teetering on the brink. Across
the U.S., one out of every five restaurants closed during Covid, and
many will never reopen. It is estimated that one million small
businesses of all types will close for good. This is a staggering number
that is hard to even imagine.
“The
hits keep on coming,” says Bozz Baucum of the winter weather shutdown.
Grant Nuckolls, owner of Twisted Root, Jacquelyn’s and Cuban Liquor,
agrees. “When the Covid lockdown started,” says Nuckolls, “we went from
paying our bills to closed. We were finally able to start takeout and
delivery, but during the recent weather event, we couldn’t even do
that.”
Imagine for a moment that you are hard at work at your restaurant. The work you are doing today will help pay
your bills from 30 days ago -- your rent, the power, the food delivery
-- but while you’re working to pay those older bills, you’re also
incurring this month’s bills. “The system is not built for you to be
able to shut down,” says Nuckolls.
“The
logistics of the equipment and the water was just the hardest thing
(during the snow week). I am exhausted; we are all exhausted.
I never want to
have to boil so much water again,” says Baucum. Meanwhile, insurance
policies were denying claims for ruined food. “Insurance policies will
pay for spoiled food if a tree falls on your restaurant but not because
you can’t get city water to your building,” Nuckolls explains.
Restaurant owners had to spend money they didn’t have on water and to-go
containers. The 10% profit margin that local restaurants are lucky to
see was wiped out day one.
So,
where were Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk during
our winter weather? Who got the checks they donated? We all know the
answers. When things like a winter storm happen to our community, we
reach out to the people we know and call the phone numbers we have, and
often, our pleas are heard by our small and local businessowning
neighbors.
These
are also the businesses that are the first ones we ask when we need a
gift card for a silent auction, a gift basket for a church function or a
shirt sponsorship or program ad for our child’s T-ball team. These
businesses support us in ways in which we are not even aware. They
provide 44% of all the economic activity in the country. They
recirculate money in a big way. On average, 48% of every purchase at
local independent businesses is recirculated locally, compared to less
than 14% spent at chain stores. When it comes to local
restaurants, more than 60% goes back into the community. Small
businesses make our community better, stronger, more diverse, more
interesting.
With
Covid losses and the recent winter weather, they now need our help, and
we should feel absolutely compelled to give it. Shop and eat at them.
Share their posts on social media. Consider giving them a good review.
“We’re all in this together,” says Baucum.
Support
for our local businesses helps drive an “incredible food, drink and
music culture,” says Nuckolls. “I get that the big chains were built to
offer convenience -- but the fabric of the local community matters, and
when we’re in a pinch, small businesses are the ones we turn to first.”
It
would also hurt us the most if these businesses went away. In a world
where we can shop anywhere, it’s important for us to support ourselves
by shopping locally.
Liz
Swaine is the executive director of the Shreveport Downtown Development
Authority and the 2021 chairman of the State Fair of Louisiana.