US Black-owned small businesses in LA are closing. That means fewer safe spaces for Black people

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Black-owned small businesses in LA are closing. That means fewer safe spaces for Black people​

The smell of burning incense filled the room as Asha Grant, the owner of the Salt Eaters Bookshop, greeted folks who entered to attend Black Queer Speed Dating, one of many events put on in the community space.

Attendees could grab name tags and enjoy a table spread filled with assorted fruits, meats and cheeses. To a visitor, the bookshop in Inglewood, California, is beautifully curated, with a memorial painting of Latasha Harlins, a Black girl who was killed by a Korean store clerk in 1991, contributing to the onset of the 1992 Los Angeles riots. The Salt Eaters Bookshop also hosts a community board filled with Black-centered events and businesses, and bright colors that catch the eye.

In Grant’s eyes, there’s still work to be done.

“People don’t know behind the scenes what it takes to keep a space running, to keep the lights on, to keep the A/C going, to keep the wifi ... , like all these things,” she said. “It’s a lot of output. I mean, it’s worth it, but also like these spaces that people treasure and love are usually run by like one, two people, really not a lot of horsepower behind it. So it’s like, yeah, I’m giving ya all that I got until the end.”

Since its opening in 2020, the bookshop has been hit with financial challenges, including the rising cost of commercial rent. A survey conducted by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies found that 32% of Black small-business owners reported facing issues with the increasing cost of commercial rent.
According to a 2017 survey conducted by California Reinvestment Coalition, now known as Rise Economy, 54% of California small-business owners reported that they often face displacement. The survey also reported that businesses owned by people of color often have to relocate due to landlords increasing commercial rent. A report by the National Association of Realtors found that commercial rent increased by 3.5% for retail spaces in 2023, which is higher than it was before the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.

As Grant celebrates entering a new three-year lease, she worries about the challenges that will come with it, including the annual increases. The new lease has increased the bookshop’s total monthly budget for rent, utilities and general expenses by $500-$1,000, she added.

With commercial rent rising despite limited funds, Grant knows having a community space in the Downtown Inglewood area means bracing for the impact. “The development is so rapid, and it’s so violent,” Grant said. “And it’s only gonna go up from here.”

Grant started throwing rent parties in 2023 to help offset costs. The first had a theme: Beyoncé’s Renaissance album. The bookshop threw another party a few months later, on Juneteenth, a second Renaissance celebration. One-hundred percent of the ticket sales for the parties went to the bookshop’s rent relief fund, which remains live and is 60% under their goal. According to Grant, the proceeds have been able to offset a few months of the bookshop’s rent.

“I don’t want for the space to be threatened again,” said Grant. “I just don’t.”

Salena Pryor, the president of Black Small Business Association of California, believes that Black community spaces were especially affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, as shutdowns led to many spaces being unable to keep up with the commercial rent. “When [businesses] were able to get qualified for the PPP [Paycheck Protection Program] and EIDL [Economic Injury Disaster Loan], they were so far gone with the rent that … it was almost impossible for them to catch up,” said Pryor.

During the pandemic, small businesses owned by people of color suffered more closures than businesses owned by white people. According to a 2021 study conducted by researcher Robert Fairlie and published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, 2020 saw a 41% decrease in active Black small-business owners. A Yelp economic report found that Los Angeles suffered the most permanent business closures in the United States in 2020.

Pryor asserts that Black businesses need to be financially supported for people to have a space to convene. “When you don’t have the funding to do it, it’s almost like the community suffers,” said Pryor. “When you start seeing these businesses close, you kind of take away the lifeblood of the community.”

At a garage sale hosted by Erdavria Rose Simpson, one of the owners and founders of the Lazy Rose Cafe, a Black-owned coffee shop that recently closed in Los Angeles, music from Hamilton played from a loudspeaker. Simpson used to play Hamilton and Disney songs at the Lazy Rose Cafe because they reminded her of being committed to service. Laid on two long tables at the garage sale were materials from the coffee shop, from tea bags to glass containers, ready to be sold to the same customers who had patronized the cafe.

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Simpson was inspired to open the cafe after facing burnout in the navy and working in the Los Angeles mayor’s office. She saw that Black women often had to work harder, and she wanted to create and cultivate a place where they could “take a lazy day”.

In 2020, Simpson, along with co-owners Antonio Martin, and Yvonne and Kevin Dunigan, opened he Lazy Rose Cafe in the Mid-City area and hosted tea parties and entrepreneurship workshops for the community. The Lazy Rose Cafe storefront closed for good in September 2023 due to lack of funds to sustain the increase in commercial rent and other business expenses.

“I’m still thinking through a closure,” Simpson said. “I still desire to make a huge impact, especially [because] I’ve always been community-minded. So it’s like, OK, what’s next?”

The garage sale alone won’t be able to cover the amount lost from opening and maintaining the cafe, but for the owners, it’s a way to let go and mourn. Simpson, with the other owners, put thousands of dollars of their personal savings into opening the cafe, she said.

They installed improvements such as stairs and counters and purchased a water heater, in addition to paying $4,000 a month for rent the first year. The rent increased to $4,500 for the following two years. When the rent increased to $5,200, and the 52 grants the owners applied to seeking financial help were denied, it was time to close. Simpson says she and the co-owners had many discussions with Botach Management, the property management company they paid rent to, about lowering the rent but were never able to come to an agreement.

Botach Management did not respond to requests for comment.

Billi Sarafine, a frequent visitor and community member of the Lazy Rose Cafe, says she is still shocked the cafe is closed and will miss hosting her events in the space. “We had to look for other places to host our meetings,” said Sarafine. “The spaces we are now at are not Black-owned, so it’s not the same feeling of ‘you belong here, you’re safe’. It’s still a kind of side-eye. But we try to ignore that and just empower each other.”

Even though Andre Taylor isn’t an avid coffee drinker, he brought a friend into the Lazy Rose Cafe one day and fell in love with the energy of the space. After engaging in a deep conversation with the owners that day about love and growth, he decided to join the community. “I don’t really get to see a lot of African Americans around me when I walk around the neighborhood,” said Taylor. “So it was really nice to get a real Black feeling, if you know what I mean, within the space. After meeting them, I was just hooked.” Since the closure of the Lazy Rose Cafe, Taylor has missed walking in and seeing the vibrancy of his people. “To see that empty space, it’s really sad,” said Taylor. “The community can really feel the absence of that.”

For Simpson, the only way to move forward was to shut the door fully.

“Even though I’m kinda seeing different opportunities and trying to figure them out, I also have to afford myself the opportunity to mourn this one part of it and then get back out there with the objective being how best to serve in the mission that I set for minorities to have lazy days,” she said.
 
I don't bother too much with bookstores anymore: it's absolutely ludicrous how much they stock and astroturf Robin D'Angelo-esque books, Orange man bad books and Wahmen books.
I went to a smaller Barnes & Noble and it was exactly this. And disturbingly Disney had a whole section for novels written on their IPs; one that stuck out was sort of like Maleficent crossed with Wicked. All of them hack writers making fanfics for a soulless corporation. The whole store was filled with trash. Even if you ignore Disney, they'll crowd out good media in your stores, while other corps (probably Mouse parented) will fill the other sections with shit like "How Niggers Invented Everything", or DiAngelo, or Kendi etc.
 
I went to a smaller Barnes & Noble and it was exactly this. And disturbingly Disney had a whole section for novels written on their IPs; one that stuck out was sort of like Maleficent crossed with Wicked. All of them hack writers making fanfics for a soulless corporation. The whole store was filled with trash. Even if you ignore Disney, they'll crowd out good media in your stores, while other corps (probably Mouse parented) will fill the other sections with shit like "How Niggers Invented Everything", or DiAngelo, or Kendi etc.
The last time I was in Barnes & Noble I hated what it had become. A lot of wokeshit. Religious section was only a small bookshelf and half of those were Amish romance novels (no religious texts or anything Eastern). Even the manga section was small and didn't have One Piece (unless you wanted Volume 9, and only in black and white).

My current book-buying are only mostly big hardcovers where PDFs don't do justice.
 
I'm sympathetic to the loss of "third spaces" but breaking down the exact target audience of the Salt Eaters Bookshop, going off census.gov:

Inglewood has a population of 107,762. I get it's part of the larger Los Angeles sprawl, but a lot of trade will be local as it's not part of central LA.
It's a black centred space. 40% of the population of Inglewood are black so 47,029 people.
60% of the population of Inglewood are aged 18-65. So that's 18,800 people who are adults likely to be using this space.
This space centres black women, which we'll assume is 50% of the population, so 9,400 black women.
15.4% of the population of Inglewood are living in poverty. While this figure will likely vary by other demographic factors, we'll just say that it's the same for everyone, so we'll say 85% of the adult black woman population in Inglewood have spending money, which is 7,990 women.
Their dating night is for "Black queer women, femmes, non-binary, trans, and gnc folks" (and more widely the bookshop is framed as a "Bookshop & community space prioritizing stories by/about Black women, femmes, & gender expansive people.") The US Census doesn't gather statistics on LGBT people but Gallup estimates the percentage of US adults identifying as LGBT as 7.1%. This again may vary by demographic factors but if we assume it's a solid 7.1% and that yields 568 people. Probably would be a little bit higher if we're factoring in "femmes and gender expansive" but I imagine it's not going to have a significant impact.
I can't really gauge this but a study by Match.com in 2016 indicated "Nearly half of the LGBTQ population in America identifies as single, and a vast majority of these singles, some 80 percent, are seeking a committed relationship." So feasibly that's 40% of LGBT people interested in dating for a serious relationship (which feels what speed dating is more angled towards).

So in theory this bookshop's speed dating night is attempting to appeal to 228 people, and that's assuming all 228 people would be willing to go to a speed dating event in a bookshop on a Friday night (which is when they seem to host them).
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Interestingly 228 people is almost exactly the number of followers they have on EventBrite.
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I don't think 228 people is a large enough population to be sustainable. I mean, sure, people might travel to Inglewood specifically to attend this speed dating night but that requires them to know about it. The event itself is held by "Love Honey Connections" who presumably keep most of the ticket proceeds, so the bookshop is relying on the people who turn up to make additional purchases of "books, comics, and zines written by and about Black women, girls, femmes, and non-binary people". What's also noticeable is they have freebies -
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A community fridge and a "free black woman library" (having free books seems like a rogue choice for a bookshop). They're also splashing out on interesting furnishing, customisation (they got a custom wrap put on that fridge, for example) and even set dressing like vintage copies of Ebony magazine. They sell merch, but they screenprint the merch themselves at "Memoryhaus" (and I bet that costs more than just getting some stuff printed).

Even if they're able to attract passing trade to a bookshop that is specifically advertising itself as an "exclusive space" and mainly selling special interest books, they're only open Wed - Fri: 1:00 - 6:00pm , Sat: 12:00 - 5:00pm, and on top of that, they're frequently hosting events (everything from puppet shows to doll making workshops to musical performances to film screenings) which means the shop floor's closed to customers who don't have tickets, and on top of that they frequently are closed for holidays -
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- and while they stress they've got a website, as someone else noticed it's actually a separate company that handles the orders and merely pays them a small commission fee, so they're not getting that much out of the website when they're closed.

This is not a bookshop. It's an arts venue that has a gift shop to try and cover some expenses. There's no scenario where this is a viable business, it's something that can only exist through grants and donations. I know the sort of person who runs this sort of thing - they want to have a place they would like to hang out, they don't believe in "the customer is always right". They've kept it going so far, so they have a small degree of sense in that they know how to market themselves, but they have no real business acumen and they also don't have a work ethic if they're going to close for an entire month in the runup to Christmas (and then immediately be closed between Christmas and New Year) instead of say, hiring additional staff or just working there themselves. They've got a place they want to hang out, and they just want to hang out there instead of working (and no doubt get a great sense of satisfaction for being "community leaders" rather than just "I have a bookshop").

I have a bit more sympathy for the Lazy Rose Café because that does just look like a nice café that also happened to put on events outside of normal café hours, and even branched out into hot food in the evenings when the "café" was closed. Running a café can be hard. But one thing I am wondering from the article - "The spaces we are now at are not Black-owned, so it’s not the same feeling of ‘you belong here, you’re safe’. It’s still a kind of side-eye”, “I don’t really get to see a lot of African Americans around me when I walk around the neighborhood... so it was really nice to get a real Black feeling, if you know what I mean, within the space". If they, like Salt Eaters, were trying to create a specifically Black Space, one that side-eyed white people, in an area without very many black people? Most of the potential customers are just going to go to a different café.
 
The last time I was in Barnes & Noble I hated what it had become. A lot of wokeshit. Religious section was only a small bookshelf and half of those were Amish romance novels (no religious texts or anything Eastern). Even the manga section was small and didn't have One Piece (unless you wanted Volume 9, and only in black and white).
I hang out at mine for the cafe and free wi-fi, but it's pretty gay. The movie and music section is pretty much for funcopops and adult toys (not the fun kind), and it's filled with manga and books written by women who all write the exact same way. Also a huge nig-nog section, and a lots of stuff promoting gay relationships in the youth section.
lol niggers are so fucking stupid.

I've never met a nigger in real life who actually enjoyed reading, or even engaged in the act for some other purpose. Never.
I saw a teenage girl years ago who was visiting her ghetto relatives and she was ruthless with them, dabbing on their inability to pronounce basic words and constantly correcting them with an officious tone. No idea if she was a reader but she had nerd glasses and wasn't taking any of their shucking and jiving bullshit.
 

Black-owned small businesses in LA are closing. That means fewer safe spaces for Black people​

lol. the first thing i think about when i go into a business is "damn, i wish black people owned this".
“People don’t know behind the scenes what it takes to keep a space running, to keep the lights on, to keep the A/C going, to keep the wifi ... , like all these things,” she said. “It’s a lot of output. I mean, it’s worth it, but also like these spaces that people treasure and love are usually run by like one, two people, really not a lot of horsepower behind it. So it’s like, yeah, I’m giving ya all that I got until the end.”
RUNNING A BUSINESS COST MONEY

MORE NEWS AT 11
wow how are all those businesses closing I thought Biden's economy was great?
we should do another PPP loan program
With commercial rent rising despite limited funds, Grant knows having a community space in the Downtown Inglewood area means bracing for the impact. “The development is so rapid, and it’s so violent,” Grant said. “And it’s only gonna go up from here.”
LOL FUCKING INGLEWOOD. THAT'S WHERE THE BLOODS HANG OUT AT. FUCKING RETARD OWNING A BOOK STORE IN THE HOOD HAHAHAHA

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lol what a great selection of books that really shows what black culture is
  • violence
  • sex
  • slavery
  • hood
 
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Gee I wonder why this business is having financial issues? You open five hours a day for four hours a week in an industry that has been fucking twatted by digital and piracy. You've scared off your actual book reading lesbians by making it KWEER, and the ago trannies you're trying to attract are terminally online and very aware of torrents.

Mr Bean would run a bookshop better than this

I guarantee this bitch is keeping this open on gofundme and explains this schedule away as 'gurl need her self care in dis raysiss society, need get her nails done and shiet'
 
I guarantee this bitch is keeping this open on gofundme and explains this schedule away as 'gurl need her self care in dis raysiss society, need get her nails done and shiet'
It fits the profile of a black business that's being used as a front. If I were the cops and there was a "bookshop" that was only open 20 hours a week it would perk my ears right up.

But the fact that they can't afford rent rules that theory out. Just another delusional black queen bee who surrounded herself completely with yes-women, most likely wasted all the money she ever had, and will be soon joining the long line of black people currently being economically ejected out of southern California and into Arizona.
 
Much as I suspected, we're dealing with a cargo cult mentality when it comes to entrepreneurship.

They don't know how to do it, they just know how to set up a shrine and pray for it.....
Look, they some tables up wit dey product, and got a bulletin board and a cash register. Shieeet, what mo do you wan from dem? A sound economic business plan, inventory control, a properly filled out ledger and account book?
 
Black Queer Speed Dating - so this is really all about niggerfaggots
I saw that and my brain just spontaneously went to a sarcastic "What could possibly go wrong?"
It's hours:
Closed: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
1300 to 1800: Thursday and Friday
1100 to 1700: Saturday and Sunday

Oh...and that's on top of thinking niggers read.
Most people who open boutique or used bookstores are like this. I've known a few over the years. They always act like they are throwing pearls before swine offering even this level of minimal engagement. They all vigorously argue with you if you tell them they need to work more and longer hours.

Like for that place, maybe being closed MTW makes sense, I don't know, but the rest is hours of INCONVENIENCE.

They miss the lunch crowd and the after work crowd on TF. They might as well not be open at all. TF should be at least 11-9 or 10 depending on what the other shops around them do, and Sat should be 9-9 (or 10), and Sun whatever every other little shop around them does... 9-9, 11-5, whatever other shops do.

Their shop is open 22 hours a week. It needs 40. This is just typical nigger laziness.
 
If they wanted a safe space almost devoid of evil White people, I happen to know a vast wonderland where their blackness will be welcomed and celebrated.

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No need to pack, just hop on the plane, lets get them there fast. Leave no black kween or kang behind, let this all expense paid one way trip to black paradise be the reparations for their suffering.
 
I saw that and my brain just spontaneously went to a sarcastic "What could possibly go wrong?"

Most people who open boutique or used bookstores are like this. I've known a few over the years. They always act like they are throwing pearls before swine offering even this level of minimal engagement. They all vigorously argue with you if you tell them they need to work more and longer hours.

Like for that place, maybe being closed MTW makes sense, I don't know, but the rest is hours of INCONVENIENCE.

They miss the lunch crowd and the after work crowd on TF. They might as well not be open at all. TF should be at least 11-9 or 10 depending on what the other shops around them do, and Sat should be 9-9 (or 10), and Sun whatever every other little shop around them does... 9-9, 11-5, whatever other shops do.

Their shop is open 22 hours a week. It needs 40. This is just typical nigger laziness.
As a random comparison, cos i've been warhammering recently, my local hobby store's essentially as follows:
Closed Mon-Tues. Open Wed-Sun. Every day they open, they open at 10, the one person working the store has lunch at 2-2:30 ideally but any half-hour they can shoo everyone out at between 2 and 3, and they close at 6 on weekdays and 5 on weekends. about 35.5 hours. And this is a store with a dedicated attendance that largely sells expensive luxury products to it's core base, but regularly gets all sorts of walk-ins.

It's far from ideal, but its assumptions are at least coherent. Most stores in the area close by six, unless they're inside the local shopping centre (they actually recently changed their hours to remove the usual thursday late night and open earlier a couple of mornings in exchange.) They work through the normal lunch period and make their lunch work around whoevers there. It's not 40 hours, but it's a sterling attempt at it.
 
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