Hopes for a quick recovery fade in NYC's Chinatown

The road to recovery for New York City’s Chinatown looks fraught with challenges: restaurants at half-occupancy, landlords attempting to collect on months of deferred rent, banks increasing loan-loss provisions. Add in worries over xenophobia and foreclosures, and a picture starts to form over how uphill a battle the community faces.

On Doyers Street, Wilson Tang closed the 100-year old Nom Wah Tea Parlor on the week of March 15.

Tang secured a Paycheck Protection Program loan to keep his employees paid at all three of his restaurant locations. When Tang talked of re-opening the business for takeout and delivery, his workers balked. Many live in the outer boroughs of NYC, and in addition to fears of contracting the virus on the subway, they were also petrified over accounts of Asian-Americans harassed and assaulted while taking public transit.

“There was a lot of fear. And with all the sinophobia and xenophobia, the idea was to not go in. And I followed what the staff wanted to do,” Tang said.

Nom Wah, along with several other restaurants, re-opened for takeout and delivery on the week of May 17 to at least open the spigot for some revenue.

Re-opening is only half the battle. Jan Lee, a landlord who also runs the community group Neighbors United Below Canal, worries that if people don’t come back to Chinatown to eat or shop, 50% of businesses may disappear - for good.

“There may not be a Chinatown,” Lee said.

Nom Wah Tea Parlor on Doyers Street. The 100-year institution re-opened on May 17 for delivery and takeout after having been closed since mid-March. Photo: Brian Cheung / Yahoo Finance
Nom Wah Tea Parlor on Doyers Street. The 100-year institution re-opened on May 17 for delivery and takeout after having been closed since mid-March. Photo: Brian Cheung / Yahoo Finance

The dessert shop and the barber

Michael Tan crunched the numbers for his dessert shop Eggloo on Mulberry Street.

“It would cost us more to re-open than it would to stay closed at the moment,” Tan said, adding that supply chain disruptions were preventing him from getting the ingredients he needs anyway.

Tan, looking for some revenue stream, hopes to soon sell a waffle maker and waffle powder mix for homemade Hong Kong-style egg waffles just like Eggloo sells.

In the meantime, Tan is leaning on an Economic Injury Disaster Loan from the Small Business Administration and whatever cash flow comes from the $25 gift cards sold on the Eggloo website for $20.

Down the block from Nom Wah, Karho Leung’s barbershop and event space 12 Pell is at a crossroads. With rent piling up and an inability to cut hair with the shelter-in-place still ongoing, Leung says closing for good is “under serious consideration.” Taking a PPP loan or EIDL can only do so much with missed rent payments piling up.

“Let’s say I take the loan,” Leung said. “I still don’t have a date I can open yet.”

The landlord

Collecting rent remains the central problem in Chinatown, underscored by a New York Fed survey highlighting a higher likelihood among Asian-owned businesses to defer expenses or payments if faced with a two-month revenue loss.