I recently drove through 80 mile an hour winds with a six year old in the car. We pulled over, and then drove some more as trees started falling around us, lightening stunning our vision. Our car lifted off the ground, set down again. Power lines were loose and flying everywhere.
Luckily, the storm ceased and we were fine. Our neighborhood was without power for three days, others went without longer. I can live without air conditioning, but it was difficult to have no refrigeration and frankly I wish I could have done laundry. As a freelancer, I also have a home office, highlighting for me the importance of good storage and the need to find backup places to go to get work done.
I felt so lucky compared to the home owners of some of the houses we drove by when the storm was over. Trees had snapped houses in two. Huge trees were uprooted everywhere. We saw one hanging upside down from the telephone wires. A friend’s house was condemned after two trees fell on it. She had to move her family, including her four kids to a rental. These disasters are nothing compared to what’s going on in Pakistan and elsewhere, but it’s home.
I felt so lucky compared to the home owners of some of the houses we drove by when the storm was over. Trees had snapped houses in two. Huge trees were uprooted everywhere. We saw one hanging upside down from the telephone wires. A friend’s house was condemned after two trees fell on it. She had to move her family, including her four kids to a rental. These disasters are nothing compared to what’s going on in Pakistan and elsewhere, but it’s home.
Another neighbor complained that with our unusual blizzards last winter, freak tornadoes this summer, “Bring on the zombies! At this point, I’m definitely ready for zombies!” Don’t speak too soon – Halloween is around the corner.
I started thinking about my experience last week, sawing and hauling trees when I read a government report today about federal funds needed after hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Today many small businesses in the Gulf Coast still face recovery challenges from those tragedies – and now they’re reeling from the oil spill.
The Small Business Administration provided about $1.4 billion in loans after those hurricanes, in addition to monies provided by Louisiana and Mississippi. The GAO recently interviewed some of those small business loan recipients and found that some of the business owners had problems applying for SBA loans because the hurricanes destroyed needed financial records. I hope most small firms are getting on board with cloud computing so they’re not storing their best data on site. If you don't know what that is, there's probably someone at your local chamber of commerce who does. At the very least, get a fire and water proof box.
“Other owners face higher expenses, especially the cost of commercial insurance and added debt from these loan programs, which has made recovering difficult,” the GAO found.
Meanwhile, Gulf Coast small businesses received almost $2.9 billion in federal contracts awarded in response to the hurricanes. The GAO also found that two of the agencies awarding the most in federal contracts for hurricane recovery couldn’t demonstrate they were monitoring subcontracting accomplishment data for 13 of 43 construction contracts. Trust me, people want things built well.
The report also found that populations and the number of small businesses in heavily damaged areas increased, but both are still below prehurricane levels.
“The impact of the recent oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico on small businesses is uncertain,” the report cautioned.
No comments:
Post a Comment