Business & Tech
Wright County Sheriff Discusses Plight Facing Small Businesses During Coronavirus Closure Order
Wright County Sheriff Sean Deringer has found himself in an unenviable position in recent weeks.
May 13, 2020
Wright County Sheriff Sean Deringer has found himself in an unenviable position in recent weeks. He has heard heartbreaking stories from small business owners asking him to allow businesses to open up while Gov. Tim Walzβs stay-at-home order and decision to close most small business has
taken a toll.
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Walz declared March 17 that bars, restaurants and other businesses close. On March 27, he issued a stay-at-home order, which has since been extended three times. It is set to expire at midnight on the morning of Monday, May 18, but many are speculating that the order will be extended when Walz carries a live press conference at 6 p.m. tonight.
While Walz has heard the complaints and pleas from small business owners to allow them to reopen, Deringer said meeting with the people who are losing everything is a tragic consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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βItβs been non-stop with people asking to open up businesses,β Deringer said. βWhatβs so frustrating for me is that they donβt want to defy the governorβs order, but itβs either βI am going to defy the governorβs order of I am going to lose everything I have β my home, my business, my property, my cars. I canβt feed my family.β Those are the circumstances our small business owners are facing right now. Thatβs what is so frustrating for me. They donβt want to be in defiance. They donβt want to be seen as a criminal element. They want to abide by it.β
In recent days, several small businesses throughout the state and even some cities in northern Minnesota have said theyβre going to reopen next week even if Walz decides to extend the current Executive Order prohibiting it.
For many of them, Deringer said, getting back to work isnβt merely a request. Itβs a matter of survival.
βMany people have considered the 18th as their breaking point,β Deringer said βFor most of them, it will have been eight or nine weeks by that time that theyβve been closed up. Theyβre at the tipping point or the breaking point where they believe they either have to open up or lock their doors forever, put the property up for sale and, most likely, lose everything theyβve worked for. Thatβs where theyβre at.β
At a time when small businesses were struggling to survive to begin with as large megastores have made their way into just about every town or city, choking off many small family businesses were feeling the stress already, COVID-19 has made a bad situation much worse. Deringer said these business owners have been the fabric of many communities for years β in some cases from one generation of a family to the next.
He shares their frustration of needing to open, but fearing that doing so will be in violation of the law.
βYouβve seen compliance with the governorβs Executive Order,β Deringer said. βThese people are the bread and butter of our communities. The small business owners are the people that are doing a good job raising their families. Theyβre the backbone of our communities. They donβt want to be criminalized or marginalized.β
Deringer and many other sheriffβs and city police chiefs have found themselves as the enforcers of the Executive Order. He hopes the governor will lift the restrictions because he is frustrated by the appearance of a lack of empathy for small business owners at the state level and that there are methods of opening businesses while maintaining social distancing protocol.
His mantra is simple β have a plan to follow the guidelines and learn what needs to be done to safely open businesses back up.
βIf I can get my philosophy understood, itβs educate, educate, educate,β Deringer said. βItβs very difficult. Iβm put in the middle. Local law enforcement is the enforcement arm of the governorβs mandate. Itβs not my mandate. Itβs my obligation to enforce and I think weβve done what we can.β
Deringer shared a personal story about something he witnessed over the weekend. He needed to pick up some supplies at the Menardβs store in Buffalo and was appalled at what he saw. The store has a policy that everyone is required to wear a face covering or mask and employees were getting into verbal altercations with customers who wouldnβt comply. Adding to the problem was that there were so many people in the store, maintaining social distancing was virtually impossible.
Yet, at the same time, he drove by dozens of small businesses that remain closed. To him, itβs an issue of fairness as small businesses are slowly dying.
βYouβve got small businesses that are going broke because they canβt open their doors and youβve got these big box stores that are busting at the seams and canβt keep up with supply and demand,β Deringer said. βYou look at the shelves at Walmart or Menards. Theyβre half-empty. As long as theyβre open, theyβre full of people.β
Deringer applauded the compliance of Wright County businesses with the governorβs Executive Order and hopes tonightβs press conference will mark a change in direction moving forward. There was no way to plan for a pandemic, but Deringer said something has to give at some point.
βI think the people of Minnesota and the people of Wright County have abided by the governorβs wishes to this point,β Deringer said. βAt what point does the government get out of peopleβs lives? They are dictating to us what we do and how we go about our day-to-day lives. At this point, it has been two months and people are tired of it. They want to be good stewards of the community and they want to do their part to keep people safe. Theyβve seen what has gone on around the country and around the world. This is devastating our economy, bankrupting half of our small businesses and people have had enough.β
Deringer said he believes that people can be treated as adults to make their own informed decisions without direction from the governor.
This press release was produced by the Wright County Government. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.