Everyone is very eager.” The shop is booked all week, and the barbers were working quickly and efficiently to keep the process moving. “I’ve been looking forward to this for quite some time,” Ramer said, “I want to get the hair out of my eyes.”Ĭo-owner John Merolla said, “It’s been great to be back in business. Jeff Ramer, a retired lawyer from Greenwich, was dying for a trim at the Greenwich Avenue shop - he joked that he was starting look like George Washington on the $1 bill, thanks to the bushy outgrowth. One customer said he drove in Monday morning from Long Island, N.Y., to get his hair cut. “We always keep the business tight and clean.”Īt Classic Barber in Greenwich, customers were at the door as soon as it opened at 8 a.m. “Some of my barbers, they’re afraid to come back to work, but I’ve made procedures to do everything how the governor wants,” Lopez said. Staff are wearing masks and face shields. The staff members are concerned about their health, even though the salon is following all state safety regulations. “We’re trying to undo the damage,” Lopez joked. Neno Lopez of Neno Clips, Cuts and Shaves in Norwalk was booked for three days straight as of Monday with two types of customers: those who had let their hair grow long and those who had tried to cut their own hair and did more harm than good. The work was rewarding, but the pace has been relentless, she said. “Now that we’re open, it’ll be a lot easier to survive.” “We’ve been living off that for the past few weeks,” DeStefano said. She said she was lucky in that she received a loan from the Small Business Administration. DeStefano said all of her employees applied for unemployment right away.
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