The Fine Wine and Good Spirits Premium Collection store at the West Shore Plaza in Lemoyne. February 17, 2020. Dan Gleiter | dgleiter@pennlive.com
The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board is moving to plug a loophole that allowed some customers to get immediate access to the website to order booze while other customers were locked out.
On Friday, a PLCB spokeswoman said they were "taking steps to implement additional controls restoring and preserving randomization as quickly as possible."
This may worth something:
Whole Foods will provide free face masks to customers nationwide - nj.com
Whole Foods is also requesting that all customers wear a face mask before entering the store to "protect the health and safety of our team members and communities." (Robert Rodriguez/TNS) TNS
Whole Foods announced Thursday that free face masks will be provided to customers at the entrances of all stores nationwide within the next week in response to the coronavirus pandemic.
How To Sell When Customers 'Aren't Buying'
It may be easy to sell food, masks and headsets in the current environment, but many small business owners in other niches are finding it's not easy to keep sales percolating. So what do you do if you urgently need sales in a very small business right now?
For ideas, I turned to Nigel Green, author of The Revenue Harvest and the former CEO of marketing firm Story Brand, who is now a solo sales strategy consultant for B2B companies. "You can make money in any economy, good or bad," says Green. "It's how you choose to see the world."
Starting Monday, customers, employees at Superior businesses required to wear masks –
In response to the coronavirus pandemic, Superior on Friday enacted an order requiring people to wear face coverings when patronizing or working at local businesses.
The order goes into effect Monday, according to a town news release. The order is in step with an advisory from public health officials, who say the use of face coverings can be effective in slowing the spread of the coronavirus, the release stated. Wearing face coverings outdoors in parks and on trails is still strongly encouraged, but is not part of the order.
Quite a lot has been going on:
Council Bluffs restaurants welcome dine-in customers back
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (WOWT) - Restrictions in place since mid-march were loosened Friday for restaurants, gyms, retail stores, malls and libraries in 77 of Iowa's 99 counties.
In Council Bluffs, several restaurants decided to welcome back dine-in customers. The dining room at Boxer Barbeque has been closed since March 18, but co-owner Renae Dieatrick decided it was time to open it back up.
She said many of her employees aren't getting unemployment and she feared for the future of the restaurant if dine-in business remained closed.
FedEx Ground customers frustrated over long delays
HAMPTON, Va. - Cellphone video showing piles of packages sitting outside the FedEx Ground center in Hampton is getting a lot of attention from customers.
Fedex Ground customer Ray Miltier shot the video on Wednesday after he showed up to the Hampton distribution center to pick up a package he said was a week past the delivery date.
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"They're people's property and belongings, and FedEx has some responsibility to keep those things protected," said Miltier. "I asked, 'What's with all the packages out back?' and was told they ran out of space and had to store packages outside."
Customers Crowd in for Restaurants' First Friday Back in Business – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
Restaurants across North Texas re-opened Friday for dine-in service for the first time in seven weeks to rave reviews from customers wary of eating at home.
At Beto and Son in Dallas' Trinity Groves development, tables were spaced six feet apart and servers were wearing both masks and gloves as they reopened their doors mid-day Friday.
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"As soon as we opened the doors, we had guests that have been coming here since day one that were teary eyed like, 'we're so glad you're still here'," said Rodarte.
Minot customers welcome re-opening of businesses | News, Sports, Jobs - Minot Daily News
Dave Pottinger was in the barber’s chair the first morning that shops could re-open under North Dakota’s new COVID-19 guidelines.
Pottinger saw a brief lull in the lineup at Town & Country Barber Shop Friday morning and claimed the spot.
“I stopped by another barber shop just to look and there were eight people waiting in line before it even opened,” he said.
Pottinger had just missed getting a needed haircut ahead of the governor’s March 28 executive order that closed shops due to the coronavirus pandemic. Consequently, he had to trim his own hair a couple of times last month and thought about having a family member cut it.
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