According to CBS News
HOLLAND, Mich. (CBSNEWS) - An entrepreneurial-minded Michigan boy and his parents are
homeless after the city shut down the boy's hot dog stand for not
having a proper permit.
Nathan Duszynski, 13, was hoping to help his disabled parents get through tough times with a food cart business in July. But he told the Mackinac Center for Public Policy that city official from Holland, Michigan shut it down after 10 minutes.
"Nate
and I are now in a shelter," Duszynki's mother, Lynnette, told the
Michigan nonprofit. "Doug can't stay with us because he takes
prescription narcotics to deal with his pain and the shelter does not
allow him with those kinds of drugs."
Lynnette
and her husband Doug Johnson, Nathan's step-father, receive about
$1,300 a month in disability payments, Medicaid and food assistance.
Lynette suffers from epilepsy and Johnson has multiple sclerosis.
Johnson
lost his job working as a paralegal at the Michigan Rehabilitative
Services in Grand Rapids when his office shut down earlier this summer, MLive reported. Their conditions make it difficult for them to find permanent work. Johnson is reportedly staying at a friend's barn.
Nathan
said he went out to help his family by purchasing a hot dog cart with
money he saved. He worked out an arrangement with a local sporting goods
store, Reliable Sport, to sell hot dogs in a parking lot. The owner
also offered Nathan a sales commission if he encouraged customers to
rent the store's motorized bicycles.
Lynette said she spoke to an
official in City Hall to make sure it was okay to set up a hot dog cart
in the parking lot and they were told they did not need a permit.
But
it didn't work out. Situated just across City Hall, a zoning official
spotted Nathan and asked him to shut down immediately.
The hot
dog stand was within the city's downtown commercial zone, where food
carts not connected to restaurants are banned. City of Holland Assistant
Manager Greg Robinson said the rule was set up to protect restaurants
in the area -- it would be unfair for carts, who don't have to pay for
property, to compete with restaurants who do.
"This is a great
opportunity for him, and it would be great to work with him and we can
in many commercial areas of the city. This just happens to be one where
he can't," Robinson said in a video posted by the Mackinac Center last
week.
The cart was sold to a local businessman, who is letting
Nathan keep it for free. The boy has been booking private events in West
Michigan, but each event requires a new health department permit. It's
difficult for Nathan to make a profit with all the costs.