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New Yelp report breaks down COVID-19 impact on businesses, including Bakersfield

New Yelp report breaks down COVID-19 impact on businesses, including Bakersfield A year into the pandemic we re breaking down how businesses in Kern County have been impacted. What we found out about official numbers and why no one is keeping a record of just how many establishments went out of business. Posted at 3:52 PM, Mar 10, 2021 and last updated 2021-03-10 20:27:43-05 BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KERO) — A new report from Yelp is highlighting some of the unknown impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on businesses. As we come up to the one-year anniversary of the official declaration of the global pandemic, Yelp’s report seems to indicate that there were nearly half a million new business openings in the U.S. during the first year. According to the report, that number is down 14% year-over-year.

The Fossil Fuel Industry s Last Stand in California Oil Country

Jesus Alonso still recalls the terrible rotten egg smell he’d whiff on his way to school in Lamont, California, immediately downwind from a large oil refinery and within a few miles of the Mountain View Oil Field. The release of toxic emissions and flammable gases from such industrial operations has beenlinked to health problems elsewhere. “You can smell it well before you reach the school,” recounts Alonso, now an organizer with Clean Water Action. “Growing up, I thought that this was just all normal but getting used to that oil and gas smell isn’t normal. Having headaches, nosebleeds, very dry skin, high rates of asthma, all of that is not normal.”

Local demand high for new, different round of PPP loans [The Bakersfield Californian]

Local demand high for new, different round of PPP loans [The Bakersfield Californian] Jan. 10 Local small businesses are about to line up again for federal dollars to help them through the pandemic, and this time the emphasis is on companies that missed out before and those classified as disadvantaged, as well as micro-businesses, membership-based nonprofits and hospitality-type enterprises such as restaurants. Monday’s kickoff of phase three of the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Paycheck Protection Program will accept loan applications from qualified businesses and nonprofits providing they didn’t get a PPP loan last year and their paperwork is filed through a community development financial institution. These are private banks usually catering to poor or underserved communities including minorities, women and veterans.

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