Amy Yag Sondrup's entire life was bound up in Access TCA. But it sat directly in the pandemic’s destructive path
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It was the company her father started. Employees were like family. Now, she had to let them go
Amy Yag Sondrup’s stomach was in knots. She had spent a week going over org charts, circling the names of employees she could afford to keep. For three terrible months since COVID-19 blossomed into a global crisis early last year, she had held on while her business was being decimated. Now, in May, she had an agonizing task ahead of her.
The pandemic’s damage to businesses large and small was overwhelming and everywhere, but this was personal. It was her company, the one she had devoted her life to, the one her father had founded and built and then passed on to her.
But Access TCA sat directly in the pandemic’s destructive path.
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