After cold weather closed El Jefe Cocina & Barโs parking lot patio in Tangletown, the restaurant offered complimentary churro donuts and draft beer with family platters. After the governor closed indoor dining, they cut staff down to three people.
โItโs so slow now that, honestly, itโs just not enough to stay open,โ said owner Miguel Urrutia.
El Jefe plans to go into โhibernationโ starting Dec. 20 and reopen the first week of March, bringing heaters out to the patio as soon as the weather turns.
Small business owners reached for this story and said they are simply trying to stay afloat until the pandemic is over. Harry Singh said business is the slowest heโs ever seen at his Original Caribbean Restaurant.
โDefinitely not making money but just trying to survive it,โ said Danny Ziegler, cooking takeout orders to place outside the Our Kitchen doorway. โIf there was snow and 20 below, weโd probably be doing a lot worse.โ
An October survey of 590 businesses in Minnesota, the Dakotas, Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan found that smaller employers were more likely to report continued declines in revenue. And the survey, conducted by the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank, said businesses owned by people of color, which tend to be smaller employers, have fared worse. Attorney K. Davis Senseman is working with small business owners who see revenue down about 30%-80% across the board this year and suggests that customers help lobby elected officials for relief, buy gift cards, order takeout and show patience with service.
โWe just canโt wait for the New Year,โ said Amazing Thailand General Manager Yin Muangmode. Sheโs trying to generate more bartender and server hours by creating a new coffee and bubble tea bar and a Thai Market featuring products made by staff artists alongside the restaurantโs chili oil. โWe still have hope.โ
C&Gโs Smoking Barbecue owner Greg Alford said business is off a little bit, but heโs doing okay.
โJust got to try to stay healthy, thatโs all,โ he said.
Ruth Bender recently grabbed her favorite doughnut from Bogartโs Doughnut Co., where the treats are displayed in the front window and a card reader is set up outside.
โIโm getting takeout from places that I love,โ she said, adding that sheโs shopping local for the holidays. โI feel like I donโt do enough.โ
Tangletown Gardens and Wise Acre Eatery created a retail market and year-round Farm Direct program with customizable orders for weekly pickup. Co-owner Scott Endres said that while the pickup is popular, restaurant takeout is a fraction of normal business volume, especially during the winter.
โQuite frankly I think a lot of restaurants are in a situation where weโre trying to minimize the amount of money we lose every month,โ he said.
Shuttered Southwest Minneapolis businesses include Egg and I, Fuji Ya, Burger Jones, the Apple store, Chino Latino, Fig + Farro (now launching a cookbook and a foundation), Sushi Tango, Pennyโs Coffee in Linden Hills and Dogwood Coffeeโs Uptown location, as well as Giordanoโs, Herkimer, Grand Cafรฉ (now creating luxury meal kits) and Little Tijuana. Many more venues are closed until further notice, including Saint Sabrinaโs and Liquor Lyleโs.
The Challenges
Local Motion Boutique is closing at the end of the year.
โWeโve been around for so long that people thought, โYouโll survive this, youโll be fine,โโ said owner Tonya Bryan.
But business is down 76%, despite a Paycheck Protection Program loan, a ticketed outdoor art fair, product live streams, dresses swapped for leggings and comfy tops, and after-hours private shopping. โI feel like weโve done just about everything that we can do. โฆ Go out and shop. Donโt use your gift cards, donโt use your loyalty points right now,โ Bryan said, adding that a typical retailer with $10,000 in monthly expenses canโt hold on until the summer for conditions to improve.
Rather than spend $40,000 to bring in a new spring line, Bryan is planning future pop-ups at one of the many vacant storefronts she expects to become available. Suburban customers are afraid to visit Uptown, she said, and the rise in crime has changed the way she operates, keeping the doors locked and removing merchandise from the store.
Salon Levante was broken into twice, and owner Dwight Carlson misses the street parking removed during reconstruction. Without destination shops like the Apple Store, he said, foot traffic is down. He normally sells 40 to 50 Halloween wigs; this year, he sold three.
โBut this probably is the most beautiful block in all of Uptown,โ he said, referencing the 3000 block of Hennepinโs new decor, lighting and street trees. โI look at the positive side of everything as much as I can.โ
Fire sprinklers saved the Iron Door Pub building during the civil unrest. Repairs are nearly complete, but owner Dan Fehrenkamp isnโt looking to open anytime soon โ he tried takeout for three weeks, but sales were only 10% of normal.
โRestaurants arenโt and shouldnโt be open now given the state of COVID-19,โ he said. โWeโre an on-site venue. Weโre a place for people to hang out, and we canโt hang out right now.โ
For the time being, Fehrenkamp said heโs teaching kids at home and repeatedly hitting refresh in a Google search for government stimulus updates.
Minnesota legislators passed a COVID-19 economic relief bill on Dec. 14 directing grants to businesses that closed due to the governorโs executive order. Hennepin County recently started โElevate Business HCโ with pro bono consultations.
The Twin Cities metro lost about 67,000 lodging and food services jobs โ a 47% decline โ between the second quarters of 2019 and 2020, according to the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Developmentโs quarterly census. The metro also lost nearly 28,000 jobs in retail trades and nearly 22,000 jobs in the arts, entertainment and recreation.
James Kenna made an offer to open a bar at the former Soap Factory building last spring but shelved that dream when the pandemic hit. Now heโs started a Facebook page for hospitality workers transitioning into real estate, and heโs showing Uptown condos. He loved working in hospitality for 20 years, most recently bartending at JJโs Clubhouse, but industry management experience doesnโt necessarily translate to a 9-to-5 career, he said.
โIโm sure a lot of people in hospitality are now struggling,โ he said. โI worry about how long it takes to recover from that.โ
Maari Cedar James of Chowgirls, which has partnered to create emergency meals through Minnesota Central Kitchen, talked about the challenge of monitoring staff health during a Nov. 5 Minnesota Events Coalition meeting.
โThis has created some HR quagmires, because a lot of times what was illegal to talk about with staff in the past is now a requirement, and thereโs a lot of gray area,โ she said. โWeโve probably revised our COVID-19 case response plan 15, 20 times.โ
At the same Zoom meeting, DโAmico Catering operations director Cathy Bovard talked about the anguish staff have felt after testing positive, requiring their co-workers to miss shifts. She recommended a free contact tracing course available from Johns Hopkins University.
Businesses that temporarily closed for a few days due to COVID-19 exposure and have since reopened include LynLake Brewery, the Uptown VFW, Butter, Hola Arepa, Bulldog Uptown, Brodersโ, Patisserie 46 and Red Cow on 50th, among many others.
Namaste Cafรฉ recently closed for a few days in mid-December due to a staff memberโs exposure to COVID-19 outside the workplace, the first health issue theyโve experienced since the pandemic began. Co-owner Nadine Schaefer said many regulars called while they were closed to show their concern and support. The restaurant could always use more takeout orders, she said. Theyโre selling chai growlers, taking pre-orders for holiday meals with mulled wine kits and lending patrons reusable containers.
Another new challenge relates to third-party delivery services.
โA lot of people are scared even to go out right now. โฆ Theyโre inclined to do delivery instead of ordering and picking up,โ said Urrutia of El Jefe, who said slow service and delivery charges up to 30% finally prompted him to axe delivery a couple of months ago. โThe reality is youโre not making any money. Delivery companies are taking a huge portion of profits.โ
Minneapolitans appear to be staying home at higher rates than others in the region, according to Google mobility reports shared by the Minneapolis Federal Reserve. Retail and recreation mobility in Minneapolis was down 42% as of Dec. 1, compared with a 33% drop statewide and a 26% drop nationally, based on a seven-day rolling average measured against a five-week period at the beginning of this year.
Google creates the reports using anonymized datasets from users who have turned on the โlocation historyโ setting. Travel to workplaces was down 52% in Minneapolis, compared with the stateโs decline of 44% and U.S. decline of 40%.
The Pivots
Businesses continue to innovate with new offerings suited for the times.
The Jungle Theaterโs fall season is virtual, including the full-length production โIs Edward Snowden Single?โ Isles Bun & Coffee is offering frozen ready-to-bake buns and puppy dog tails. Wild Mind Artisan Ales added a menu by chef Ian Gray and the Wild Grind coffee bar.
The former Gigiโs Cafรฉ is converted to Cafรฉ Wyrd, which is taking weekly pre-orders for coffee beans, brioche and scratch-made soups. Don Raul became the takeout-oriented taqueria El Travieso. Brodersโ added Pork & Piccata specializing in pickup and delivery. Red Cow created the โvirtual food hallโ Chicken Republic. Nightingale added Lake City Sandwiches with focaccia made daily.
And new venues continue to open: Rosalia Pizza and Fire & Nice Alehouse are making woodfired pizza, Yeah Yeah Taco is sharing Zettasโ kitchen on Eat Street, Petite Leรณn offers a takeout-friendly menu, Cafe Ceres is headed to the former Pennyโs location, Gyu-Kaku Japanese BBQโs tableside cooking is adapted for takeout and Sooki & Mimi is hiring for a new Uptown space.
Taproom Direct, a partnership that includes Fair State Brewing and Sociable CiderWerks, will pop up every Monday this winter at Pizza Luceโs Uptown parking lot, providing a pickup site for pre-ordered beer and cider.
The Driftwood Char Bar launched a fundraiser, opened its kitchen to the family-owned soul food eatery Wholesoul and continues the Shotgun Ragtime Bandโs 500-show streak through livestream every Sunday.
โThe fundraiser has done real well. The problem is, with this going on for so long, weโve really used up every reserve,โ said booker Larry Sahagian.
At Polished Nails and Spa, which is making 20% of normal revenue and cautiously serving about eight clients per day, staff are selling at-home spa kits and applying for as many grants as possible, even though a $10,000 grant is quickly consumed by rent and other expenses.
โI donโt want to complain because my main goal is to keep the business,โ said owner Ivy Le. โIโm thankful that itโs still here.โ
The Helpers
Customers
โ Curbside pickup preferred to third-party delivery
โ Gift card purchase; many promotions underway
State of Minnesota
โ $88 million in grants to temporarily closed restaurants, gyms and other venues with at least 30% sales decline
โ $14 million in grants for movie theaters and convention centers
Hennepin County
โ Administering $25 million in new state funding for local business grants; applications expected to open in January
โ Elevate Business HC offers free consultations
Business associations
โ Lake Street Council, Main Street Alliance, Southwest Business Association, LynLake Business Association, Uptown Association, 50th & France Business Association