Newport Beach chamber is small business
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Richard R. Luehrs
In a recent chamber-commissioned telephone survey of Newport Beach
residents, 87% of the respondents identified themselves as supporters
of small business. This could not make me more excited, because if
you are talking about small business, the Newport Beach Chamber of
Commerce and the Newport Beach business community as a whole is small
business.
As I have mentioned in previous columns, Newport Beach is a very
unique place because of the small businesses and entrepreneurs that
are located here. We are unique because we not only have business
owners who care about their bottom line, but about Newport Beach, as
many are Newport Beach residents, as well. Contrary to the belief of
some people in the community, Newport Beach is not about big business
and real estate development. In fact, nothing could be farther from
the truth. Newport Beach is small business.
The city is full of business owners who have invested life savings
into dreams and have poured blood, sweat and tears into their
business and our beautiful city. They provide a wonderful array of
goods and services. They employ our residents and provide a source of
revenue for college-bound teens. They contribute to the community tax
base, helping to provide city services. They give freely to a host of
charitable endeavors and they support each other through networking
and business-to-business patronage.
Examples? If you’re hungry, head to Amelia’s Italian and Seafood
Restaurant on Balboa Island and ask for small business owners John
and Hetty Robinson. For more than 38 years, the Robinson family has
made Amelia’s one of Orange County’s most famous restaurants.
If you need a boat slip, call small business owner Roland Vallely
of Vallely Boat Rental. Roland and his family have rented out boats
and slips since the 1920s.
Tax problems? Give Rudy Baron at Baron Accountancy a call. Rudy
has been a small business owner in Newport Beach for more than 30
years.
Do you have a special gift need? Contact Marion or Lula Halfacre
at Traditional Jewelers in Fashion Island. The Halfacres moved here
from Mississippi in 1972, opened a small shop and have grown the
business into a Newport Beach icon.
There are literally hundreds of remarkable success stories found
right here in our community.
If it is not obvious yet, my point is that Newport Beach really is
small business at its best. The Newport Beach business community is
truly made up of small “mom and pop” stores in every commercial
district in the city. You will often find this in other communities,
and together we should embrace and support our local merchants.
Of the nearly 1,000 business members of the Newport Beach Chamber
of Commerce, 95% have fewer than 25 employees. That’s right -- the
Chamber of Commerce represents and works to build the local economy
through its support for the success of each and every small business
owner in the city.
The Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce does its best to help all of
the small businesses in the community in many ways -- from giving the
city’s economy a needed boost in the traditionally slow winter months
by hosting the Newport Harbor Christmas Boat Parade to showcasing the
many different dinning opportunities at its annual Taste of Newport.
Another event that illuminates our local small businesses and
allows them to show off their goods and services will take place Feb.
19 at the Newport Beach Marriott. The Business at the Beach Business
Expo is the lone “locals only” business expo to give businesses
important exposure to residents and other businesses in the area.
With food, drinks, entertainment and more than 70 local small
businesses expected to be on display, I encourage everyone in the
community to come out and support our risk-taking entrepreneurs.
Small business owners in Newport Beach face many challenges. Their
biggest is simply making ends meet. We recently read in the Wall
Street Journal that executives across the nation ranked California as
the nation’s worst business climate. The criteria involved whether a
certain state’s costs, laws and regulations made it unduly burdensome
for business.
To put it bluntly, our lawmakers at the state and local level have
a huge blind spot when it comes to the daily realities of
entrepreneurs and neighborhood businesses. They seem obsessed with
the politics of consumers versus big business.
As a result, too much regulatory legislation is aimed at large
corporations, which are better able to absorb the cost, without
regard to the consequences for small companies that bring stability
to our local and state economies.
This next legislative session will be even worse for our small
businesses. With a projected $20 billion state budget deficit,
enormous pressure will be brought to balance the budget on the backs
of business, regardless of size or ability to cope.
We at the chamber understand the hardships and sacrifices that
small business owners face and applaud their efforts. We need to do
more to keep our small businesses and our local economy thriving. The
Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce will continue its effort to help
small businesses succeed ... one member at a time.
* RICHARD R. LUEHRS is president and CEO of the Newport Beach
Chamber of Commerce.
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