Amid Harvey recovery, small businesses roll up sleeves and get back to work
Loading...
| Houston and Danevang, Texas
Even for a farmer, there is such a thing as too much water.
Sweat dripping from under his red, white, and blue cowboy hat, Guy Mouelet is standing in his farm at the corner of Fondren Road and Willowbend Boulevard here, taking a break between giant hacks with his shovel at the tangled green weeds that have overrun his eggplant bed. He recalls not thinking too much of hurricane Harvey before it broadsided Houston with days of torrential rain.
鈥淚 thought maybe it will be a little rain and it will pass, but after four days, when I came back and saw the water, water everywhere,鈥 says Mr. Mouelet, his voice trailing off.
It will take 鈥渁 couple of months鈥 to get his farm back to pre-Harvey crop volumes, but now is the time to work, he says, not make excuses.
鈥淲e need to work, because people need it,鈥 he adds. 鈥淧eople lost everything, and they need to eat to grow strong.鈥
The metaphor is apt. As the nation gears up for another major storm bearing down on Florida 鈥 and continues to assess the damage from Harvey, which Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) estimated at $150 billion to $180 billion 鈥 small businesses are helping lead the city鈥檚 recovery. Even as they deal with their own losses, they are providing not only helping hands in the rebuilding effort, but a precious sense of normality to communities still reeling from the 25 trillion gallons of water just poured on their heads.
鈥淭here are going to be a number of challenges, but I think people are very resourceful, people are working very hard to be supportive of one another,鈥 says Laura Murillo, president and chief executive officer of the Houston Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.
A week after the rain stopped, anecdotes of the grit and generosity of Houston鈥檚 small business owners and their employees abound.
There are the three Mexican bakers who, trapped by floodwaters in their store, for two straight days before handing out the fresh loaves of bread and pan dulce to fellow Houstonians and first responders. There鈥檚 Jim 鈥淢attress Mack鈥 McIngvale, who converted his two furniture stores into 聽for more than 400 people. And there鈥檚 , a small coffee shop that turned itself into an impromptu shelter and, later, free coffee dispensary for first responders.
'We're cooks, so we're cooking'
A few minutes from Cafeza, in the shadow of a tangle of elevated highways, sits ., another cafe where 鈥90s hits are played over the speakers and sales go toward feeding the local homeless population.
This week, however, Paper Co.鈥檚 two top chefs haven鈥檛 been there. They鈥檝e been in a church parking lot 12 miles away, cooking breakfast and dinner for the streams of volunteers who gather there before and after dispersing throughout the city to help gut flooded-out homes.
鈥淧eople are just doing what they know how to do,鈥 says Trevor Little, Paper Co.鈥檚 sous chef. 鈥淲e鈥檙e cooks, so we鈥檙e cooking.鈥
Simply being open can be an invaluable benefit for shaken Houstonians these days. Small businesses re-opening is 鈥済ood for the psyche,鈥 says David Ramos, the head chef at Paper Co.
鈥淚t鈥檚 scary when you go to the grocery store and you have to get in line just to get into the grocery store,鈥 he says. 鈥淧utting things back to normal helps your mental psyche get back to normal.鈥
While many in Houston likely will re-open soon, the coming months are likely to test their nerves 鈥 and purse strings.
Small businesses are generally considered more vulnerable to natural disasters, especially in the short-term 鈥 with fewer resources to rebuild and absorb losses. Recovery will be a long process for business owners throughout southeast Texas. They spend their days pulling drenched carpet and soggy sheetrock from their workplaces, only to go home and do the same thing. At least 70 people were killed 鈥 a low death toll experts have called a testament to both people heeding advance warnings and southeast Texas鈥檚 all-hands-on-deck rescue effort 鈥 but 1 million people were displaced by the storm.
, the small business that supports Mouelet and eight other farmers and connects them with customers for their produce, says its clients lost about 60 percent of their crop due to Harvey.
鈥淭he next few weeks will be a little tough,鈥 says Liz Valette, the company鈥檚 president. 鈥淎ll the revenue streams we connect the farmers too, there are questions marks over them.鈥
'I do not feel like a victim'
Keith Kresta, a Crescent cotton farmer, grew up on a farm and is accustomed to the capriciousness of weather. Already mid-harvest, when he saw the Colorado River rising, he hastened to prepare his crops, move his cattle to higher ground, load his furniture into trailers, and install a pipe ring and pump around his farmhouse. As darkness fell on Texas, there was nothing more Mr. Kresta could do. He had managed to harvest 60 percent of his 800 acres.
Around 1 a.m., he and his wife, Sara, stood inside their house and watched the floodwaters creep up the walls. When the water reached their knees, they hugged one another and tried to smile.
鈥淭he last thing we said was, 鈥榃e鈥檒l make it,鈥 and we walked out of the house,鈥 Kresta says.
The crop didn鈥檛 fare well. Cotton seed is sprouting inside the bolls, and any salvageable lint is stained and of poor quality. Most of the cotton modules in his field were blown apart by the wind or swept away by the river. Mud coats the remainder.
It鈥檚 a stark contrast from the Sunday before, when cars were stopping alongside his farm to take pictures of the rare 鈥淎ugust snow.鈥
Texas is the No. 1 producer of cotton in the United States, and before Harvey, farmers in Wharton County were anticipating their best harvest in more than 10 years. Despite farmers working feverishly in advance of the storm, without enough trucks to haul the cotton away or gins to process the crop less than an estimated 14 percent of the state鈥檚 fields were harvested before Harvey made landfall Aug. 25.
鈥淎 guy told me he had 36 round modules,鈥 says Jimmy Roppolo, general manager of the United Agricultural Cooperative gin in Danevang, Texas. 鈥淎fter Harvey, he could only find eight, and they were under water. This year looked like the promising year that would prop them up, but with this, it鈥檚 going to be tough.鈥
Kresta estimates a loss of more than $140,000 for his farm. Insurance will pay for some of it, but it will only cover 70 percent of his 10-year average yield. The past decade has not been good.
鈥淵ou work 12 months out of the year in a noble profession because you want to contribute 鈥 you want to feed and clothe the world,鈥 Kresta says, his voice breaking. 鈥淭o see it all wiped away just a few days before harvest is impossible to put into words.鈥
He鈥檚 not sure what the future holds for his family or his farm, but he is quick to point out those who lost so much more, from crops and homes to loved ones. He clings to his faith and believes God will not challenge him with more than he can handle. Material things are replaceable, he says. And he believes that he and the other farmers in his community will survive.
鈥淚 sat in church this morning, and I felt at peace,鈥 Kresta says. 鈥淚 do not feel like a victim 鈥 my story is just one of thousands. You learn what people value in a time of crisis, and I value my family and my faith.鈥
Signs of resiliency
Across Houston, small businesses have continued to open back up and pitch in. One neighborhood emailed Ms. Valette to tell her they鈥檒l be hosting their weekly farmers market this weekend, just like normal, and that they want to see farmers like Mouelet there 鈥渁s a sign of resiliency.鈥
Valette is hopeful there may be some produce available to sell by then.
鈥淚 got so excited when I saw things sprouting after a couple days,鈥 she says. 鈥淛ust being able to see things grow, I think it helps with the healing process after a loss.鈥