Like billions of others worldwide in this ongoing pandemic, Larry Landon is constantly reminded of the impact of the novel coronavirus. There are the countless tourist attractions, not far from his office in Niagara Falls and typically crowded 365 days a year, that are now shuttered until further notice. And the small grocery store he can see from his window now has employees herding quarantine-prepping patrons into long lines on the sidewalk, spacing them six feet apart per public health guidelines and permitting no more than 20 to shop at any given time.
Then there is Landon’s work itself.