Staff at North of 60 Massage Therapy and Wellness are getting a handle on the tensions of business recovery after they closed for more than two months during the Covid lockdown.
Krista Rusk, masseuse and co-owner of North of 60 Massage Therapy and Wellness, is happy to be seeing her clients and co-workers again.
Blair McBride/NNSL photo
โWe re-opened on June 1, which was also our three-year business anniversary,โ said Krista Rusk and Danielle Horvat, co-owners and masseuses at the massage centre on 49 Street.
The path to reopening was a long one after they decided to close on March 20, the day before the NWTโs first confirmed case of Covid was announced.
They had no revenue coming in at all during those 10 weeks and saw no clients, unlike some other health-related establishments that could maintain some activities through emergency or remote procedures.
โIโm a real busybody and the stresses of the unknown and not knowing when weโll be able to go back to work (was challenging),โ Rusk admitted. โAnd with the different protocols, there was a lot of uncertainty until they were clarified. We didnโt have revenue but we had costs for personal protective equipment and our rent and monthly operating expenses that we couldnโt postpone (such as) the Mindbody software program we that we use for bookings and pay for monthly.โ
More than 500 appointments had to be cancelled and later rebooked. Not being able to see her clients was tough for Rusk.
โWe have clients with therapeutic needs and some come in regularly. Some of them have chronic injuries and the therapies help get them cope and theyโre dealing with pain management. It was hard knowing you werenโt there to help them manage their pain. It was hard not being able to be there for them and to help them de-strees,โ she said.
But the nature of their business meant they didnโt experience some of the common difficulties faced by other small companies.
The 10-week shutdown was temporary for the three masseuses, and no one was laid off. The adoption of added sanitation standards was a small transition because the masseuses were already used to disinfecting the premises due to the physical character of the job. However, they still make skin contact while performing massages.
โLatex gloves arenโt mandatory for us. We use elbows and forearms (too) so youโd have to wear really long gloves for that,โ Rusk said with a laugh.
The other measures theyโve adopted are familiar to most other businesses, including the use of hand sanitizer and mandatory face masks for staff and clients. If clients find it uncomfortable to wear masks then masseuses will don face shields, glasses and a mask.
Clients are asked to wait in the hallways and come five minutes before their appointments instead of 10-15 minutes in advance โ or to come right on time โ so thereโs less potential contact in the office. Appointments must be booked online and clients answer Covid screening questions before each appointment and again when they arrive, in case their condition has changed.
โEverybody has been very understanding and respectful of the guidelines. There hasnโt been a problem with that but itโs a lot of work,โ said Husk.
Sheโs proud to say that North of 60 is almost back to its pre-Covid level of activity. It helped that theyโve received funding assistance from federal and NWT relief programs, but she and her staff have been doing a lot of extra work to get to this point. They managed to catch up on most of the backlog of canceled appointments from late March to June and their regular clients have returned.
โBefore Covid we were doing about 18 appointments a day between three of us. Now we can only do 12-15 appointments a day because we need that half hour gap between appointments to sanitize the office and wipe down every surface,โ Rusk said. โBefore Covid we had about 15 minute gaps between appointments. The extra time now is also so that clients donโt pass each other in the hallway. So weโre at the office longer now (but) weโre not necessarily doing more appointments. Before Covid I wouldโve worked, for example, 9 to 2 but now I might have to work 9 to 4.โ
Rusk tries to be aware of the toll that the extra work might have on her. It took the pandemic shutting down her business for her to understand she was pushing herself too hard.
โI tried to see the silver lining during Covid and I didnโt realize I was getting burned out until I went off work about a week after we shut down. I was doing about seven massages a day. Itโs an equal balance of trying to be there for clients and maintaining personal health as well,โ she explained. โCovid taught me to maintain a balance between work and home. Being a business owner, youโre putting in work as a masseuse but also taking care of the business and office and accounts.โ
Still, Rusk is grateful theyโve brought the business back and are able to resume operations.
โ(Itโs great) seeing our clients again and getting back to the routine and being around my co-workers. Itโs a nice feeling.โ
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