Eager to get back up and running, Volkswagen said it would stagger the return of its employees beginning May 3, implementing nearly 100 health measures, including new personal protective equipment and temperature checks for its workers. But the company postponed its plans to reopen Wednesday, citing “the readiness of the supplier base, as well as market demand and the status of the COVID-19 outbreak.”

Even as states reopen, city leaders, employers, and workers continue to face a difficult question shared by Americans across the country: Can this once-booming economy open again without the coronavirus wreaking further havoc?

“I don’t see what has changed in the past four weeks where it’s now safer for anyone to go back,” said Steve Cochran, a worker at the plant. “Best-case scenario we could test everyone. That’s not feasible.”

Before coronavirus shutdowns, “people came to work sick as they could be, because they didn’t want to use their vacation,” said Cochran, who said he and other employees didn’t have sick leave and hadn’t been consulted on how to reopen the plant.

“I could go to work and get the virus a lot easier than at the store. There are 3,000 people,” he said.

Small manufacturers are affected, as well.

Aaron Hoffman’s Chattanooga-based hot sauce company was hoping to grow by 200 percent by the year’s end when the pandemic hit. But, Hoffman, the co-founder, has laid off six of his 10 employees, with just one person fulfilling orders drawn from three months of inventory he has left in stock.

“I’m just waiting on the testing,” Hoffman said of bringing people back. “I’m not a medical expert. I’m just hanging on to what Dr. Fauci says.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, warned states wanting to reopen their economies not to “leap over things” that would potentially allow the coronavirus to rebound.

Can Chattanooga Bounce Back?

Chattanooga’s relatively diverse economy should insulate it somewhat, as major employers like insurance and distribution centers remain operational, said Dr. William Fox, the director of the University of Tennessee’s Center for Business and Economic Research.

But without sales tax, a major source of revenue in a state without earned income tax, the budget of a city like Chattanooga will take a real hit.

Audience members wear 3D glasses while watching a movie at the Tennessee Aquarium IMAX Corp. theater in Chattanooga, Tenn., on Jan. 31, 2017.Luke Sharrett / Bloomberg via Getty Images

“Our city is struggling financially. There is just no other way around it,” Berke said — a problem exacerbated by Easter tornadoes that caused an estimated $300 million in damage and displaced more than 400 residents.

In a Hamilton County economic impact survey published in late April, 41 percent of the 243 businesses that responded said they had had to lay off or furlough employees, and more than 50 percent expect to see the impacts last more than seven months. Only 5 percent reported experiencing no impact.

For Nick Wilkinson, the executive director of the Tivoli Theatre Foundation, the stoppage has been devastating — especially as the future remains unclear.

Wilkinson runs the iconic Tivoli Theatre in downtown Chattanooga and two other spaces that put on about 150 shows a year. When the foundation took over the theaters from the city in 2015, it grew the number of shows by around 900 percent, and Wilkinson just acquired a new building while undertaking a $40 million renovation.

Now, that’s all on pause, and Wilkinson — like many other business owners — isn’t keen to pack his theaters for concerts and plays any time soon without proof that it will be safe for attendees. He also isn’t sure how he can go out and try to raise needed money for his nonprofit theaters when there is so much immediate need around him.

The city, he said, can’t recover alone.

“It doesn’t matter how good Chattanooga has been,” Wilkinson said. “At the end of the day, if the cavalry ain’t coming from D.C., there is nothing any local small community can do to address the needs they have. It’s just impossible.”