Economy
The Survivors
Melanie Lefkowitz |
“People want to shop local. There is a big movement around it, and people understand it.”
The deli that gives credit. The diner with the perfect burger. The clothier who knows your size. Small businesses help make New York’s neighborhoods what they are. But on many retail strips, a City Limits investigation finds, they are disappearing.
Competition from chain stores, rising commercial rents and the lingering recession are part of the pressure. But city and state policies, on everything from parking enforcement to zoning, are also squeezing small businesses.
What separates the businesses who make it from those who fail? What could government do to help mom and pop firms survive? And what will neighborhoods look like if they don’t?
“People want to shop local. There is a big movement around it, and people understand it.”
“A lot of small businesses aren’t getting the assistance they need to become more competitive.”
“If you’re the manager of a chain, a clean sidewalk doesn’t change the numbers on the register.”
In an excerpt from the City Limits magazine investigation of small businesses in New York, a look at the holdouts along increasingly chain-ganged 86th Street.
“If it doesn’t start doing something soon, I’m going to be out of business after 26 years.”
A look at the Bronx Business Improvement District at Third Avenue and 155th Street.