In a typical fall, on any given day, the streets of Los Angeles would be bumper to bumper with black SUVs shuttling talent and executives to and from sets, premieres, awards shows, business meetings and airports.
But as the coronavirus pandemic rages on, this is far from a typical fall, and limousine companies across the city say that their business has taken an 80 to 85 percent hit in the past six months. “This was not on any of our business plans.
Terrorist attacks, stock crashes, all that stuff, we had a backup for 90 days to 120 days for our business, but not with things like a pandemic,” says KLS Worldwide Chauffeured Services founder Alex Darbahani.