Cedar Valley News
July 7, 2026
Nobody Asked Who Owned the Building
By George Khan
I read the paper in the slow hour, between the breakfast plates and the lunch rush, and lately it is the same story every week. Another familiar name is closing. Another chain you grew up with is filing for bankruptcy.
This spring, the small ones started going down faster than the big ones. The people who count these things say small-business bankruptcies have jumped by nearly half this year, at a rate we have not seen in a long time. Not the giants. The little places. The kind I have run for thirty-one years.
I read it standing behind a counter I own.
I want to tell you something the news never tells you when a place you loved goes dark. I have watched it up close, more than once, and the papers always get the reason wrong.
They call it failure. They say the place could not compete, or people stopped coming, or the food slipped. Sometimes it is true. Usually, it is not. Usually, the place was full. Usually, people loved it. And it closed anyway, and everyone shook their heads and said what a shame, and nobody asked the one question which would have explained it.
Who owned the building?
Thirty-one years ago, when I bought this place, I scraped together everything I had, and all the two banks would lend me, and instead of renting like a sensible man, I bought the walls. It was the most frightened I have ever been, signing those papers. It was also the smartest thing I have ever done. People told me I was foolish. Renting is smarter, they said. More flexible. And for years, on paper, they were right.
Then I watched what happened to the ones who rented.
A diner in the next county, packed every weekend for twenty years, best pie around. The building got sold to somebody far away who had never eaten there, the rent doubled at renewal, and so ended the best pie around. The diner did not fail. It was evicted from its own success. I drove past the place last month. It is a nail salon now, the pie gone from the earth, and nobody wrote a word about why.
And it was not only the diner. I have watched it up and down these streets for thirty-one years. The bakery on Third, forty years of birthday cakes, gone the spring the landlord’s children inherited the block. The shoe man who could bring any boot back from the dead, gone the month the strip mall changed hands. Every one of them full. Every one of them loved. Not one of them owned the floor it stood on.
There are a hundred ways to lose a good business: bad luck, bad debt, a hard year, a road rerouted. I have watched most of them. But there is one nobody prints, one sitting underneath a lot of the others, and it is the plainest thing in the world. Do you own your home, or do you rent it?
A business renting its home is only ever one bad winter, one rent hike, one far-off decision away from the street, no matter how good it is or how much a town loves it. A business owning its home can have a terrible February, miss a payment, tighten its belt, and still be there in the spring.
The news feels sorry for the small owner and bets on the giant. But I have watched, for thirty-one years, who is still standing after a hard winter, and it is not usually the giant. The tortoise, it turns out, owns his shell.
This is what I would tell you.
Go to the places you love, the ones still standing, and spend your money there while they are open, not after they are gone. And if you ever get the itch to build something of your own, a shop, a trade, a small good thing with your name on it, and you have to choose between renting something bigger now or owning something smaller free and clear, I will give you the only business advice I have.
Own the roof. Owe nobody. Be there in the spring.
Cedar Valley News is free, and it comes to your inbox every morning, six days a week. If this morning’s editorial was worth your time, forward it to someone who would value it, too.
Cedar Valley News also gathers on Facebook. If you would like to join the conversation, you are welcome. Was there a place you loved, one everybody still misses, gone now? Tell us its name, and whether anyone ever asked who owned the building. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy
This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town of Cedar Valley are fictional, the 2026 surge in small-business bankruptcy filings described here is real, per the American Bankruptcy Institute and Epiq AACER.

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Correction:
This is Publication Consultants’ motivation for constantly striving to assist authors sell and market their books. ACM is Publication Consultants’ plan to accomplish this so that our authors’ books have a reasonable opportunity for success. We know the difference between motion and direction. ACM is direction! ACM is the process for authors who are serious about bringing their books to market. ACM is a boon for serious authors, but a burden for hobbyist. We don’t recommend ACM for hobbyists.

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