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90,000 packages are stolen in NYC every day. One building fought back. Julie Besonen, New York Times Feb. 21, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail FILE: This Baltimore resident uses a decoy package, marked with an X, to discourage the so-called porch pirates. The thieves are filmed by a camera located above the door.SEBASTIEN DUVAL/AFP via Getty Images NEW YORK A yellow note fluttered down like a leaf when I opened the door to my apartment one day last fall. Handwritten, it read in part: “Hello My package was stolen on 10/1/2020. I came home to find the empty box (item removed) in the trash. It was a nice, gray women’s blazer. Please return to 5C, no questions asked.” ....
90,000 packages are stolen in NYC every day. How one building fought back. boston.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from boston.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Listen • 2:12 The pandemic has changed not only the way people interact with one another, but also how they buy things. The coronavirus pandemic and subsequent lockdowns have hurt many industries, and while we hear about restaurants and hospitality, retail is also reeling. As retail stores were forced to close during Florida’s stay at home order, small business owners like Sarah Byron of in Naples, says they were able to remain open by adapting their sales tactics. “Because my husband and I, this is both of our jobs, there was no other source of income,” Byron said. “There was nothing else we could do, so we had to make it work, so we did. We just figured it out and we were FaceTime shopping with people, and if I had to deliver a puzzle to Bonita, that’s what we did that day.” ....
Originally published on December 15, 2020 7:38 pm The Coronavirus pandemic and subsequent lockdowns have hurt many industries, and while we hear about restaurants and hospitality, retail is also reeling. As retail stores were forced to close during Florida’s stay at home order, small business owners like Sarah Byron of Pop Toy Co. in Naples, says they were able to remain open by adapting their sales tactics. “Because my husband and I, this is both of our jobs, there was no other source of income,” Byron said. “There was nothing else we could do, so we had to make it work, so we did. We just figured it out and we were FaceTime shopping with people, and if I had to deliver a puzzle to Bonita, that’s what we did that day.” ....