NH Business Review April 24, 2020

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APRIL 24 - MAY 7, 2020 VOL. 42 • NO. 8 • $1.75

ONLINE @ NHBR.COM

Inhospitable times

FEATURED INTERVIEW

Q&A: WWII veterans William F. Cronin Jr. and Warren Pond PAGE 30

Ominous signs for NH’s healthcare providers PAGE 22

Retirement in the age of coronavirus

As warmer days approach, tourism industry wonders when life will return to normal

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Before its shutdown, 40% of NH firms got PPP loans Banks scurried to meet demand as program’s renewal awaited

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Photo by Allegra Boverman

Nothing personal, but ‘don’t come here’ How social distancing is changing NH real estate norms BY PATRICK O’GRADY

Bonnie Miles has been selling real estate for 35 years and has seen just about everything, but she never envisioned the day when she was not invited to a property closing. Miles, with Coldwell Banker in Claremont, had two closings scheduled in early April and was told not to come to either one. “The buyer was to go in and do their part. Then the seller would go in and do

their part,” Miles said, explaining how one closing was completed. Marc Drapeau, In the other closing, the seller president of the New completed the paperwork with Hampshire Association of Realtors, talked to members their lawyer in Claremont and about the state of the then sent the envelope overnight current market in a to the closing company in the UpYouTube video. per Valley. “They told me, ‘Don’t come up here,’” said Miles, who has been working REAL ESTATE NORMS, PAGE 13

BY BOB SANDERS

When the federal Payroll Protection Program essentially ran out of money on the morning of April 16, ending the $349 billion forgivable loan program in less than two weeks, it was a bit like musical chairs: Would your business be one of the 1.6 million to get their loan approved before the music stopped? Bedford-based Great NH Restaurants got 10 approvals, for each of its various T-Bones, CJ’s Western Grill and Copper Door restaurants. The money landed in its bank account the day after Easter. Yankee Publishing Inc. in Dublin — parent company of NH Business Review — got a $1.25 million loan approved, but at deadline has yet to see a penny. Kilwins, a sweets shop in downtown Portsmouth, hasn’t heard a thing, even though the PPP LOANS, PAGE 11


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