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Day Seven: Banking on the beer distributor

I noticed a sign on the door that said “drive-through service only.”

Outdoor ATM, Bank
Outdoor bank ATM. Credit: Pixabay.
Carin M. Smilk is managing editor of the U.S. bureau at JNS, with extensive experience in writing, content editing, copy editing and newsroom management. She has worked in newspaper and communications offices in New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Baltimore; freelanced for more than 25 years; and contributed to magazines and books. She has won more than three dozen individual and team journalism awards on the U.S. state and national levels.

Let’s talk business, shall we? Let’s talk about how businesses are operating in the age of corona.

What is open: supermarkets, small grocers, hardware stores, office-supply stores, pet stores, pizza places, some restaurant takeout, gas stations, beer distributors.

Beer distributors? My husband tells me that is deemed an essential business; after all, it’s basically food and beverages. He’s not such a drinker but recognizes that others are.

Now, that distinction was not so apparent at first to the nice man named Izzy, who runs the nearby laundromat. His store was ordered to close, though he had somewhat of a beef with the local government officials, explaining (quite reasonably) that if the beer store down the street was open and folks were going to keep drinking, then they would need a place to wash their clothes and keep clean. Or an existing public-health crisis will be made all the worse.

(He told me this at said store while the Jewish mother in me was rewashing items my college-age son brought back from his dorm.)

What’s not open: coffee shops (sigh), state liquor stores, clothing stores, bookstores, tanning booths, day spas and salons, florists, bakeries—nearly all non-essential services where people tend to congregate.

And then come the banks.

I got a check in the mail, a refund for a class trip my teenage son won’t be able to take next week. And so, I walked the half-block to my bank, which over the years has changed names about five or six times (my account is actually grandfathered in, I’ve been there so long).

Today, I noticed a sign on the door that said “drive-through service only.”

That explained the long line of cars snaking their way to the outdoor service window. So I stood behind the last one, slowly inching forward as the passengers got their financial needs taken care of. Nearly there, one of the tellers I know by name came outside and kindly told me that I couldn’t stand in line because it was too dangerous. A car could hit me.

I must have given her a look (at that point, we were both standing in line near the potentially errant autos). “If you have your debit card, I’ll show you how to deposit the check,” she said cheerfully.

“I don’t have a debit card,” I replied.

She blinked. “Oh, well, then just come back and drive up to the window.”

At this point, I had moved ahead two spots and was almost next.

And then came the big reveal—one that only my family and closest friends know.

“I don’t drive,” I said. “That’s why I always walk to the bank.”

(Living in New York in my 20s, and then Boston and Philadelphia in my 30s, I kind of skipped that stage … )

That about floored her.

Out of sympathy, I told her fine, OK, I’ll come back the next day, driven by someone else. That someone will be my brother, who lives four towns away, and being a teacher, is on leave right now, while my husband has meetings all day long from home. He will pick me up, and we’ll drive the half-block over to the same window in the same spot with the same check to the same teller to make my deposit.

And then we’ll visit the beer distributor.

Carin M. Smilk is the managing editor of JNS.

This Reporter’s Notebook will appear starting on March 16 until the end of the month (or when schools reopen).

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