Skip to main content

8 Ways to Support Local Businesses During the COVID-19 Pandemic

A couple ordering a product online.
JGI/Tom Grill/Getty Images

The COVID-19 pandemic has been taxing on our personal lives and mental health. But for many who can’t work from home, the impact of the coronavirus is completely calamitous. We can’t easily dismiss this time in history as a bizarre fluke or a meme-able few months because, on a larger scale, this situation is certainly horrific. And on a local level, the devastation is even more real.

Thankfully, there’s still hope — if we take action now, that is. We’ve put together a few simple suggestions to support local businesses thrive during these tough times and make sure things can return to normal in your neighborhood.

Find Your Favorite Business’s GoFundMe

A man on a sofa using his phone and laptop.
PeopleImages.com - Yuri A / Shutterstock

Look, it’s not the most elegant solution to the broad and sweeping problems created by the coronavirus, but it’s certainly a direct action you can take. Many independently-owned bars and stores have set up emergency relief funds for their staff members. If you can afford it, any money contributed to these types of fundraisers is going directly to helping the workers who are most immediately impacted by the shutdown. Considering many state unemployment websites have crashed due to being bombarded by newly out-of-work citizens, this is perhaps the quickest way certain subsets of workers can get relief.

Read more: How Harlem Hops is Giving Back

Get in Touch With Local Politicians

A man using his phone at dining table.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

We get it — local politics often feel banal at best. But the truth of the matter is local politicians — governors, mayors, state representatives — have a lot of say in what goes on in our daily lives. Now would be a great time to contact them and let them know that their constituents are largely in favor of things like rent freezes, health insurance reforms, and emergency aid to the most vulnerable populations. These things will greatly benefit the workers who are suffering the most as their places of employment remain closed.

Find Your Favorite Performers Online

A man with beer bottle raising his arm while watching an online performance from his laptop.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Frighteningly, one of the biggest impacts of COVID-19 is that not only are more traditional employees, like bar-backs, shopkeepers, and booksellers, finding themselves lacking work, but entertainers of all kinds are suddenly without spaces to perform. Musicians, comedians, drag performers, DJs, dancers, and more rely on local economies to make money, and because they’re often paid in cash, they’re not even eligible for government assistance programs when the work dries up.

But artists are, by their very nature, a creative bunch and have taken to livestreaming services like YouTube, Facebook Live, IGTV, and Twitch to broadcast shows from home. Most of these performers are smart enough to also include their Venmo, PayPal, or Cash App accounts in these performances. It’s your job as a responsible consumer to tip these artists because, at this moment, it might be the only way they can make any money at all.

Don’t Stop Shopping

A man with mug using a laptop.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

This won’t apply to every local business, but many hometown stores are coming up with new and clever ways to keep operating without their brick-and-mortar locations staying open. If a favorite shop of yours has an online presence, see what they’re selling on the net, and buy away! You’re probably saving a lot of money because you’re eating out less nowadays anyway, and you might as well splurge on some new books, handmade goods, or artisanal products that otherwise seemed too expensive before the shutdowns.

Consider gift cards, too! While stores might not be open right now, this isn’t bound to last forever — and if you can help shops stay afloat by paying them now for business later, now’s a good time to do so.

Mind Your Manners

A male barista handing out a paper bag to a customer.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

We’re all nervous and definitely on edge, but that doesn’t give you a pass to be rude. If you have to go to a grocery store or any other essential service, remember that the employees are under immense amounts of stress and are likely to be drastically underpaid. “Please” and “thank you” go a long way toward helping us all feel sane.

Order In

A delivery man bringing food to a male customer.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

If you can keep your mind away from the brain-numbing effects of social isolation, there are certain pleasures to be had in the Seamless-and-chill lifestyle. Cooking for yourself is fun, but — especially right now — there’s nothing wrong with calling your favorite restaurant and getting their goods delivered right to your door. This is a great way to keep your spirits up but also keeps cash flowing into businesses that really could be hurting right now.

Read more: Best Food Delivery Services

Tip Extra

A barista posing behind the counter.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

That being said, if you’re going to indulge, now’s the time to give more money than normal to the delivery workers and restaurant staff that make sure you’re eating great. These hardworking cooks and delivery people are risking their health for your convenience, and you can thank them with your cold hard cash. If you’re picking up to-go food, remember to tip the people you pick the food up from, too.

Remember That It Doesn’t End When This Virus is Gone

A male florist happily using his iPad in his flower shop.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The truth of the matter is that local businesses have a hard time operating year-round, even when there isn’t a pandemic destroying our social lives. We should all remember that advocating for our favorite local places doesn’t have to stop once our lives return to normal. Aim to be politically active, and consider voting for politicians who want to raise the minimum wage, curtail landlord power, and protect workers’ rights all year round.

This also goes for responsible consumerism in general. It has certainly become easy to rely on sites like Amazon or Walmart to deliver pretty much anything to your door at any given moment. But local economies are important, too, and if you can afford to pay a few extra dollars for books or household goods or clothes, it’ll be a huge boon to businesses that need your money.

Read more: Asian-American Businesses to Support

Editors' Recommendations

Eric Shorey
Eric Shorey is a freelance pop culture blogger whose work has appeared in Nylon, Vice, Pitchfork, Rolling Stone, and MTV. He…
Ranked: The 11 best Bill Murray movies ever
He's starred in a lot of films, but if you're a fan, you must see these Murray movies
Bill Murray from Lost in Translation

A name that is and should be widely recognized in comedy, Bill Murray has been around to provide laughs for decades. Bringing his own unique qualities to the screen, Murray has carved for himself a niche based on his personality that simply cannot be copied. Between his masterful physical comedy to his perfectly timed and hysterical line deliveries, Bill is truly a one-of-a-kind talent. From his many roles over the years, the films he stars in are either because a certain director or repeat collaborator has a great bond with him, or simply because he is able to steal the spotlight no matter the assignment. Due to this, he has been given opportunities to play cameos in later films such as Dumb and Dumber To, Get Smart, The Grand Budapest Hotel, and a cameo as himself in Zombieland, which has got to be his best cameo.
All the way from wacky and zany to introspectively deep, Bill Murray portrays a lifetime of emotions in our list of films today. If you watch him closely enough, his performative nuances will make you laugh, cry, and think about what it truly means to be an actor. Murray is loved as a human being worldwide (for the most part), who has reportedly shown his face at random bars and parties just for a kick, becoming the owner of four minor league baseball teams, spontaneously studying philosophy and history in Paris, and starting his own golf apparel line. These and many other reasons are why we are here today to celebrate his accomplishments on screen, so sit back and scroll through the 10 best Bill Murray movies ever.

11. Moonrise Kingdom (2012)

Read more
The 9 best golf movies of all time – from Caddyshack to The Legend of Bagger Vance
Do you love the game? Then get inspired to get back out there by watching these movies
Happy Gilmore

When it comes to sports movies, some of our favorite films have always been golf adjacent. There's just something about this slow-paced and overwhelmingly frustrating game that we can't get enough of. So now that spring has arrived, it feels like the perfect time to go back and rewatch some of the best golf movies of all time.
Whether you're a seasoned pro or a complete amateur, these great golf films have a little something for everyone. Whether you're looking to experience the drama of the game through a comedy or a biographical spotlight, we've got you covered.

Tommy's Honour (2017)

Read more
The 11 best Clint Eastwood movies (acted in and directed), ranked
Here's a good place to start if you want see Eastwood's best of the best
Clint Eastwood in Heartbreak Ridge

 

If one were to mention the greats from classic Hollywood cinema (especially Western movies), Clint Eastwood’s name would be one of the first to come up. A highly successful actor, producer, and director, Eastwood has developed his own unique style of film that follows a narrative format with a monumental ending every time.
Before his illustrious cinema career, Eastwood worked as a lumberjack, a firefighter, a swimming instructor, and a bouncer to get by. Kicking off his film career in 1955 as a few unnamed extras, Clint has since spent the following over 65 years committing his life to the practice of film and acting. As a director, and unlike David Fincher and his meticulous directing, Eastwood has been known to get what he wants in one take without storyboarding, rehearsing, or changing the script at all. Considering some of the great directorial works he has produced, this is impressive beyond belief but not exactly unexpected from a character like Clint.
Since there are so many Eastwood features to pick from (72 acting credits on IMDB), this list is about the films he has directed and acted in. This means that we will, unfortunately, have to omit some of his greatest performances to date (Dirty Harry, A Fistful of Dollars, The Good, The Bad and the Ugly, Escape from Alcatraz, Hang ‘Em High, etc.), despite them being as great as they are.

Read more