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JUST A PHASE BY PAT MORAN

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If there’s one essential message that came out of the virtual May 11 meeting of the COVID-19 Business Leaders Roundtable, it’s this one: Masks are vital.

In March, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended that everyone wear masks over their noses and mouths in public to stem the spread of COVID-19, and now it’s on Mecklenburg County Manager Dena Diorio and Co. to spread the word. “We are going to [look at] what we need to do to get that message out and what’s the most effective way to do it,” Diorio said.

Diorio convened the meeting, which enlisted business leaders to build out the best way to implement Phase One of Gov. Cooper’s plan to reopen North Carolina, launched at 5 p.m. the previous Friday. The group met again on May 19 to discuss Phase Two, which is expected to be implemented on May 22, though that was not officially announced by Q.C. Nerve’s print deadline.

Phase One modified North Carolina’s stay-at-home order to allow people to leave their homes for commercial activity with retail business capacity increasing from 20% to 50% as long as cleaning and social distancing continues. The early part of the meeting addressed fine-tuning a toolkit, available on the county’s website, that consolidates guidelines for businesses to reopen safety — cleaning and disinfecting, signage, how to figure maximum capacity and, of course, masks. (As of May 19, the county’s dashboard reported 2,695 cases of COVID-19 and 69 deaths due to the disease.)

As much as the county strove to stay ahead of the information curve, many Charlotte businesses were already determining the safest course forward in the pandemic. Their efforts raised a question not heard at the roundtable: What if you threw an opening-the-economy party and no one came — or at least showed up late?

JUST A PHASE Small businesses proceed with caution as county reopens

BY PAT MORAN

“We just don’t think it’s safe yet,” said Karla Southern, event and creative coordinator at Heroes Aren’t Hard to Find. Any doubts about where the Elizabeth comic book shop stood on jump-starting the COVID-19 ravaged economy were addressed on the store’s blog, where a sobering illustration by artist Patrick Dean boldly declared, “We won’t die for the Dow.”

Organizers with Reopen Meck, an advocacy movement that aims to surpass Phase One’s guidelines and have more restrictions removed, hold the in NoDa, offers one obvious answer to Pillai’s query.

opposing view. The movement hosted a 200-person strong protest in Uptown on May 1. Reopen Meck founder Maya Pillai, a student and president of the Davidson College Republicans, seemed surprised when Queen City Nerve told her that some businesses were imposing stricter safety measures than those allowed, if not completely delaying opening their doors.

“What are their reasons for not opening?” Pillai asked.

Teresa Hernandez, owner of Pura Vida Worldly Art NEWS & OPINION FEATURE

“I don’t want to get sick. I don’t want my employee to get sick,” Hernandez said. “He has a family — two daughters and his wife.”

Hernandez closed her business on March 16, several days before the mandated shut down. Schools had been let out, and students were hanging out in the shop, Hernandez remembered. This normally is not a problem, but at a time before social distancing requirements and face masks, she grew concerned. She kept her two-person staff on payroll for a couple of weeks, but when she, like many other small businesses, was unable to secure a loan through the Payroll Protection Program, she reluctantly laid them off.

With the May 8 relaxation on retail restrictions, Hernandez contacted her staff. One member declined citing safety concerns, but the remaining employee, Paul Kepp, was eager to work. The following Saturday, Hernandez implemented what she calls a “soft test opening.” The following weekend, Pura Vida opened for a set of abbreviated five-hour days. Instead of 50% capacity, the store imposed a 20% capacity, established handwashing stations and required staff to follow a strict sanitation regimen, cleaning surfaces and merchandise. Hernandez also required customers to wear face masks, and provided masks for customers who did not have any.

“Sixty-five percent of the people who came through had their own masks,” Hernandez said. “The other 35% we ended up giving them a mask.”

Though she considered the weekend test a qualified success, Hernandez decided to implement appointment-only shopping, in which a patron reserves either 30 or 45 minutes to shop in a small group of two to three people. Masks, sanitation and social distancing requirements remained in place. She also implemented curbside pickup for patrons who don’t yet feel comfortable inside a store.

As restrictions lifted, Queen City Nerve interviewed several more small businesses that sought their own path forward in the first days of Phase One. While their decisions varied, all of them shared similar concerns.

Scott Wishart, owner of Lunchbox Records in the Belmont neighborhood, has opted not to open his store for now.

“I don’t feel safe yet,” Wishart said. “My employees don’t seem to feel that way either. [We] have kids who are in school. It’s kind of hard to work when your kids are out of school.”

Opening up would be especially problematic for a record store, he offered. “It’s the kind of business where everyone has MAYA PILLAI SPEAKS AT A MAY 1 REOPEN MECK RALLY. PHOTO BY JUSTIN LAFRANCOIS

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NEWS & OPINION FEATURE to touch everything and I have to show people stuff,” Wishart said. “I can’t just sit behind plexiglass at the counter like a dude in a convenience store.”

Like Hernandez, Wishart shut down in-store operations on March 16. A few days later, he switched to a business model split between mail order and curbside service. Even with his doors locked, Wishart cleans frequently with sanitizer that he makes himself with alcohol, water and aloe. For pickup, patrons pay for merchandise online and then arrive by car. Wearing gloves and mask, Wishart takes the bagged merchandise out to the parked car. He said only half the people who come up to the door and try entering the store wear masks.

“I still don’t think they get it,” he said.

Amy Goudy is also keeping her doors closed. The former owner of the 8910 Music record label channeled her love into a passion project, a hip-hop-themed bodega, retail space and event venue called The Corner. The north Charlotte establishment had a soft opening in December but Goudy reserved the grand opening for CIAA weekend in late February. As COVID-19 began to spread, Goudy also closed before the legally mandated date. By March 8, The Corner’s doors were locked. Goudy’s decision was health-based.

“I don’t have health insurance and my daughter has Type 1 diabetes,” Goudy explained. “So, we’re at relatively higher risk.”

Goudy has started curbside pick-up for the store. With the shop less than half a block away from her house, she can easily don gloves and a mask to bring goods over to her establishment. “It’s only 144 steps away,” Goudy proclaimed. “I counted them.”

Goudy’s business frequently takes her to New York, so she’s seen how COVID-19 can ravage a community.

“It’s so unpredictable and contagious,” Goudy said. “I don’t understand why we’re reopening now. The entire state shut down with less than 1,000 cases. We now have 15, 000 cases or more and they want to reopen.” [By our print deadline, the state had seen more than 19,000 cases.]

Goudy maintained that advocates for reopening might be more circumspect if they knew someone who has died from COVID-19, or someone at great risk due to a compromised immune system.

For Susan Nesterowicz, that person is herself. “As someone who is immune suppressed because of being in active chemotherapy, it is scary to think about contracting it,” Nesterowicz said, “because I imagine I’d be a sitting duck.”

Along with husband Nami Nesterowicz, Susan owns and runs The Bag Lady, a Charlotte metaphysical store with a feminist bent. Like many other businesses, The Bag Lady closed its doors before the state-mandated shut down. Although the store followed the lead of other establishments and launched curbside service for merchandise like books, crystals and jewelry, Nesterowicz estimated that The Bag Lady saw a 90% drop in business.

Even so, they didn’t rush to reopen at half capacity on May 8. The Bag Lady opened the following day, Saturday, with limited hours, a four-day work week, a socially distanced staff of two, a five-customer capacity and strict handwashing and sanitation procedures.

“Everyone has to wear a mask — employees and customers,” Nesterowicz offered. “No one can come in without a mask.” There has been no pushback from customers, she maintained. “It’s been pretty darn joyful. People are excited. They’re thrilled to come back into the store.”

But the Nesterowiczs can’t lose sight of what is at stake for them. Susan’s husband Nami offered a sobering assessment. “Susan has cancer, so if she gets sick, she’s done,” Nami said. “We have bills to pay, but her life is more important than the job.”

The bills have been piling up for everybody, and the situation is exacerbated by commerce slowing to a crawl.

“In March the comics industry stopped,” Southern offered. “The last time we got new product was March 25, and no new books have shipped since. Our business went down a good 40%.” March 25 is also the date the comic book store shut its doors. Mail order and curbside picked up some of the slack, and Southern is grateful to community members who reached out to support the store by buying comics that were already in stock.

Yet, despite the economic hardship, the shop is not going to open — yet. The comic book store faces the same conundrum as Wishart’s record store. They both sell a product that people need to hold. It’s hard for people to shop for comic books without picking them up and flipping through them, and sanitation is a challenge.

“You can’t spray Lysol on books,” Southern said. Until the management sees a definitive break in the spread of COVID-19, the doors will stay closed. Southern maintained that it makes no sense to rush. “People’s health is worth more than a comic book. It’s more important to keep our employees and customers healthy.”

The way Southern sees it, the store is advocating tough love — with a heroic bent.

“We’re kind of like Greek Gods,” Southern offered. “If people don’t believe in us, then we don’t exist. We have to take care of the people who take care of us, even if they get grumpy about it.”

Among the stores contacted by Queen City Nerve there runs a common thread of practicality: It’s just good business not to risk your staff and patrons. It’s a view driven not by partisan talking points, but by boots on the sales-floor practicality. Many more establishments have adopted this approach. As this story went to press, VisArt Video Executive Director Gina Stewart reported that the Charlotte video store and nonprofit film resource was bringing in staff to do inventory, but that there were no plans to open. Curbside and delivery will likely come soon, Stewart said, and tax deductible donations are accepted.

Reopen Meck’s Pillai said it’s up to each store to decide whether or not to reopen, but that the county can no longer bear the economic impact of small businesses being closed as well as rising unemployment. Phase One is a slight vindication of Reopen Meck’s platform, she maintained, but it doesn’t go far enough. She pointed to South Carolina as a model for Mecklenburg County to follow, even as the Palmetto State reported more than 100 new COVID-19 cases each day since May 5 and the death toll there rose to 391 by May 18.

Pillai also cited the unintended consequences of North Carolina’s stay-at-home order.

“What’s happened with the closure of these businesses is, we’ve seen drug and alcoholic rates increase. We’ve seen suicide rates increase, and we’ve seen domestic violence rates increase,” Pillai maintained.

While the shut-down surely fuels economic tensions that can lead to increases in suicide, alcoholism and domestic violence rates, it is not the only contributor. The North Carolina Republican party’s cuts in unemployment benefits, Medicaid expansion, public education and mental health services have also exacerbated economic tensions for North Carolinians, and have done so without the purpose of stemming a THE CORNER CLOSED SOON AFTER ITS GRAND OPENING. PHOTO BY MARC PROSPER

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NEWS & OPINION FEATURE pandemic and saving lives.

Pillai also pointed to other pandemics that have impacted the county, such as H1N1, the  u, SARS, MERS and Ebola.

“In those instances, we never shut down the state to the degree that we have now,” Pillai maintained. “I’m not trying to compare coronavirus to those pandemics. I’m simply saying look at previous instances where we’ve had huge outbreaks of other viruses and pandemics that have plagued Mecklenburg County.”

Data shows that COVID-19 is killing 20 times more people per week than the  u does; SARS and MERS are not as contagious as coronavirus; and COVID-19 is much easier to contract than Ebola and far more deadly than H1N1.

Pillai said she would like to see North Carolina reopen small businesses such as salons and restaurants. As long as we have occupancy limits, sanitation and social distancing, COVID-19 will be contained, she o ered. However, masks should be optional for customers at businesses.

Above all, Pillai advocated for reopening sooner rather than later.

“We cannot bring our economy to a screeching halt,” she urged.

Susan Burns Nesterowicz agreed that we cannot stay at home inde nitely.

“But at the same time, I think human life is more important,” she o ered. “We have sta depending on us and we’re trying to walk the edge of a knife. We’re hitting that balance between safety and still being able to recoup some income and pay rent and our bills.”

Southern agrees with Pillai that the county needs to open back up, but how much will opening lead to closing again in two months, she wondered.

“Is it better to just give it more time now and hopefully not have to repeat the same process that we’ve been through in March and April?” Southern asked. Her concerns were supported in mid-May when a previously unreleased White House report listed Charlotte high among the next potential COVID-19 hot spots.

As for optional masks for customers, that idea will be a nonstarter at Heroes, Southern o ered.

“There’s always going to be that one person who doesn’t want to wear a mask, who doesn’t want to have their quote-unquote rights infringed upon,” she said. “But at what point are they infringing on other people’s rights to lead a healthy lifestyle? We’re only as strong as the weakest link in the chain right now.”

PMORAN@QCNERVE.COM KARLA SOUTHERN AT HEROES AREN’T HARD TO FIND

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Pg. 7 MAY 20 - JUNE 2, 2020 - QCNERVE.COM NEWS & OPINION COLUMN

THE SUFFRAGIST BE WARY THE NAYSAYERS Anti-suffrage movement was as ugly as the vote battle is today

BY RHIANNON FIONN

As President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act in 1965, prohibiting racial discrimination in voting, he said, “The right to vote is the basic right without which all others are meaningless. It gives people, people as individuals, control over their own destinies.”

Perhaps that is why we are still arguing over voting restrictions. As I write, a three-judge panel is hearing arguments in Holmes v. Moore, a voter ID case regarding legislation from the North Carolina General Assembly (NCGA) that was blocked in February 2020.

During the century between the time when former slaves began pushing for women’s suffrage and the time when the 19th Amendment was ratified in 1920, women were vilified and abused for simply wanting to cast a ballot, something I dare say many of us take for granted today.

Look no further than political cartoons of the day for evidence where women were depicted as ugly, overweight and toothless. Voting rights for women were incorrectly linked to loneliness, anxiety, an inability to marry and more. Some cartoons depicted women wanting to vote being forcibly gagged.

According to multiple historical sources, arguments against women’s suffrage included assertations that politics is too dirty a world for women and that they would vote as their husbands told them to anyway, that men should be the voices for their entire family unit, the idea that more voters would be too much of an expense, that voting would distract women from duties like bearing children and keeping house, and, of course, that women are too emotional to vote.

Here in North Carolina, the anti-suffrage movement infiltrated all levels of government. In a Charlotte Observer editorial published in June 1920, sparked by a letter from James A. Bell, former Mecklenburg County chair of the Democratic party, the editors asserted with no evidence that the majority of the voters in the county — all men, of course — were against women’s suffrage. “This newspaper is distinctly of the opinion that at least 80 per cent [sic] of the voters in the county are opposed to woman [sic] suffrage and that the sentiment throughout the state against it is hardly of less proportion.”

Bell’s letter was itself sparked by a referendum in that year’s Democratic primary. He claimed that Gov. Thomas Bickett and Sen. Furnifold Simmons were also opposed to women’s suffrage “and so (are) many others high in the councils of the party.”

The editorial made it clear that if Mecklenburg County Democrats made a strong show of opposing suffrage for women the rest of the state would, too, stating, “pressure might be brought to bear in an indirect way against those who are trying to carry this proposition through the legislature …”

In August 2020, both Tennessee and North Carolina legislatures held special sessions and took up the issue of ratifying the 19th Amendment as the vote among the states stood at 35 having ratified and eight rejecting it. North Carolina rejected the amendment.

As I wrote in the first installment of this column in November: One Tennessee statesman, acting on advice in a note from his mother, was the deciding vote. After the vote, he reportedly hid in the attic of the state capitol, or, according to History.com, “Some say he crept onto a third-floor ledge to escape an angry mob of anti-suffragist lawmakers threatening to rough him up.”

The North Carolina General Assembly symbolically voted to ratify the 19th Amendment in 1971 more than 50 years after it mattered. Meanwhile, between racially motivated gerrymandering and attempts at voter ID laws, the NCGA persists in its efforts to prevent North Carolinians from exercising their right to vote.

Last month, according to a press release, the North Carolina League of Women Voters “filed a motion to intervene in a lawsuit that would remove individuals en masse from voter rolls in Mecklenburg and Guilford counties. The lawsuit, Judicial Watch v. North Carolina, et al., was filed in federal court earlier [in April] to force a purge of thousands of registered voters in the run-up to the general election in November.”

“This lawsuit is a despicable attempt to push a voter suppression agenda during a public health crisis,” says Allison Riggs, interim executive director and chief counsel for Voting Rights at the Southern Coalition for Social Justice.

On May 4, according to The News and Observer in Raleigh, a group of Democratic legal organizations filed a lawsuit against the state of North Carolina in an effort to loosen absentee voting rules since this year’s presidential election is being held during a global pandemic.

On April Fool’s Day, NCGA Senate Leader Phil Berger told WFAE that he’s not in favor of making mail-in voting easier for state voters. And, if history serves, that is no joke.

According to fivethirtyeight.com, voting by mail does not give either party an advantage and “both parties have enjoyed a small but equal increase in turnout.”

And, according to the MIT Elections Lab, “As with all forms of voter fraud, documented instances of fraud related to (vote-by-mail) are rare.”

The N.C. State Board of Elections has proposed several ways to make mail-in voting more feasible for voters, including making election day a holiday and not requiring postage on absentee ballots. The BOE also noted that if the state is going to allow all mailin voting that it needs to decide soon as it will take a great deal of time and effort to prepare and mail the ballots.

While, traditionally, only 5% of voters in North Carolina vote via mail, that number is expected to rise this year. You can request an absentee ballot now via the Mecklenburg County Board of Elections website so you can be sure to exercise your right to vote in 2020. INFO@QCNERVE.COM

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