I work at our parent’s diner that has been passed down in our family for three generations now. Despite being a staple of our giant coastal community, the two of us struggled savor pretty much everyone else in the food service industry while I was in the COVID-19 pandemic. At first it started with the forced lockdowns plus our unexpected switch to delivery plus carry-out supplier at a time when the two of us had just finished expanding our giant indoor family room. The last thing on our mind in the months leading up to the first lockdown was having to rely on deliveries plus take-orders to literally survive, let alone stay in the black for the ensuing 24 months, which proved to be impossible anyway. I would say that the two of us are incredibly lucky to be in the position the two of us are in now to say that the two of us survived the biggest crisis this supplier has faced since the early 1970s, however not all of the beloved family diners in our community shared our fate. Many of us struggled in part from basic supply chain shortages through 2020 plus 2021. My sister is a building supplier supplier plus struggled to maintain stock of steel rebar tie wire, let alone keeping several options available for her familiar customers who rely on him to supply them various different kinds plus sizes of rebar tie wire. She said it was honestly hard to find 14 gauge black annealed rebar tie wire for eight months before she had to look at a market on the other side of the country to fulfill orders she had backed up from the year prior. Now she said that the rebar supplies have gone back to levels similar to that of before the pandemic.
The basics in rebar