Businesses not allowed to open are uncertain

BROWNSVILLE — Gov. Greg Abbott announced Monday he was going to let his stay-at-home order expire and allow non-essential businesses, such as movie theaters and clothing stores, open at 25 percent capacity starting Friday. He also announced restaurants, libraries and museums could also open their doors as long as they limited occupancy but said businesses such as hair salons and gymnasiums could not open just yet.

Local business owners who were not allowed to open said that while they believe there has to be restrictions so the re-opening can be done in a safe manner, for both customers and workers, they do not think a movie theater is safer than a gym, a hair salon or a yoga studio.

“Something that made me feel very angry was to listen when the governor said he was going to allow movie theaters to open, pretty much everything but gyms and hair salons. We, when we are studying cosmetology, we have to read hundreds and hundreds of pages that talk about bacteria, about how to sanitize the chair after each client, sanitizing the scissors and the hairbrush,” Carlos Constantino, owner of Constantino Hair salon, said.

“We learn the difference between cleaning and sanitizing and everything has a process. When we have to do our state exam for our license, the most important part is how we clean and sanitize, even if we do everything else right if we don’t clean and sanitize correctly we fail the test.”

Constantino said that while the landlord of the hair salon has been very understanding, there are still a lot of expenses that he has to cover because he has to keep providing for his family. He said people think that because he is a business owner he has a lot of money, but the truth is all the revenue they have been making at the hair salon has gone to opening their cosmetology school, which was founded a few months ago.

Esthela Valdez, owner of Breathe Hot Studio, moves into the yoga pose warrior Friday following a live-streamed yoga session in her closed studio. While the business has not been allowed to reopen yet, Valdez has been streaming yoga sessions using a tablet several times a day. (Denise Cathey/The Brownsville Herald)

The business owner said that the current administration makes it seem as if the process of getting the help from the Small Business Administration Disaster Loan is quite easy, but the truth is the process to apply for it is extremely difficult. He added that even after going through that process, the loan was denied for his business.

“It’s practically impossible to be able to access that money and even receiving unemployment is very difficult to get, too. A lot of our employees have had unemployment denied because they either didn’t make enough money or they don’t have all the paperwork they need,” he said.

Esthela Valdez, owner of Breathe Hot Studio, said she has been having the same issues with the Small Business Disaster Loan and it has been weeks since she applied. She was told she was not going to receive any confirmation about whether or not it was approved and all she would see was the money in the account.

She added she hopes the studio can open soon because unlike regular gymnasiums, students there don’t have to touch anything. Valdez said the transition of closing has been very difficult because since she had just expanded to a bigger place her expenses multiplied.

“Our yoga studio is very different than a gym because we don’t touch anything, everyone just comes in with their own mat and that’s it. At the gym, yes, you touch machines and things like that. We used to have mats for our students here but ever since this started we removed those and we sanitize before and after each class,” she said.