Dreary days
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Jenny Marder
Dark, dreary clouds and murky skies have cast a shadow over the first
days of summer -- especially for the business owners. Known as “June
gloom,” the overcast weather this month has discouraged beachgoers
and put a damper on business Downtown.
“It’s probably been the single most determining factor in sales
being down,” said Gavin Dawson, store manager for Jack’s Surfboards.
Lingering clouds struck especially painfully for Michael Ali,
owner of the Zack’s and Zack’s Too snack bars and rental shops on the
beach, where sales have been down 70% and weather conditions have
forced the business owner to lay off three full-time employees.
“Myself and other concessionaires have suffered tremendously for
close to eight weeks,” Ali said.
The gloom set up before the first month of summer this year, cast
its pall over April and May, as well. And while June gloom usually
gives way to sun by noontime, this year, clouds have been coating the
sky all afternoon.
“I could cut prices, I could cut service, I could cut product, I
could cut hours of operation,” Ali said. “But the one thing I have no
control over is Mother Nature.”
Business is down 20% at the Sun and Sands Motel, and people are
canceling reservations.
“People are only complaining. They check out because of the
weather,” said J.P. Barot, general manager of Sun and Sands. “They
plan to stay for three or four days and then decide to go somewhere
else. Gloominess brings the business down.”
At Jamba Juice, where people usually flock to escape the summer
heat with a refreshing 20-ounce fruit smoothie, this month has been
marked by short lines and sparse crowds.
Managers of the juice bar had planned on tripling the staff to
prepare for the summer rush, but now, employees are being sent home
early.
“Everyone has to go home early, and in turn, none of us have any
money,” Amy Fisk, 21, said. “We’re hiring new staff for the summer,
but it’s hard to train them since we have no money to keep them
here.”
At the beach, summer has also been off to a typically slow start,
although lifeguard towers opened with the first signs of sun each
day.
“For the weather to show some promise [Monday afternoon and
Tuesday] is encouraging,” said Lt. Mike Beuerlein of Huntington Beach
Marine Safety.
Brandt Maxwell, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service,
predicts that the warmer trend this week should elbow out the gloomy
weather.
June gloom, Maxwell said, is a result of a strong wind flow caused
by low ocean temperatures, which causes clouds over coastal areas
even while it becomes warm and sunny farther inland. This June has
been cooler than normal, he said.
“Deserts get quite hot, but ocean water temperature lags a little
and doesn’t reach its peak until later in the summer,” he said. “This
contributes to a strong onshore flow and more prevalent winds from
ocean to shore.”
But the weather pattern has begun to change, Maxwell said.
“Until [Tuesday], the low clouds have never been able to clear the
coast,” he said. “Soon, it will be warmer everywhere, and the onshore
flow will be much weaker. It should be quite apparent by [today].”
Not everyone Downtown is hurting.
“We’ve been busier than ever,” said Stephanie Dalessandro, area
manager for Diane’s Swimwear, who said sales have gone up since last
June. “Everyone comes in from Inland, and when it’s raining, they
don’t turn around. Everyone still needs to buy a bathing suit.”
But for many tourism and summer-related businesses, summer sun
can’t come soon enough. For Dawson at Jack’s Surfboards, crowds sweep
in as clouds sweep out.
“Tourism picks up when it’s sunny, and when it’s not,” he said,
trailing off, looking out the window and shaking his head.
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