Small businesses take on Trump’s tariffs at Supreme Court
The Supreme Court will now decide whether President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff policy is legal.
- A Lakewood Ranch jewelry business owner states her company is in jeopardy due to current tariff policies.
- The owner states U.S. Customs has repeatedly held shipments, demanded excessive paperwork and imposed high tariff costs.
- The business, which supplies jewelry to museums and cultural institutions, has been forced to raise prices and faces delivery uncertainty.
- The owner argues that tariffs are punishing small creative businesses rather than protecting American industries as intended.
The biggest shopping day of the year is just days away, but this year will be different for my business and thousands of other small businesses.
For 23 years, I have run a small business built on transparency, craftsmanship and trust.
My company, The Pearl Connection – known to museum stores and boutiques nationwide as SEA LILY –supplies jewelry to the Smithsonian catalog, the Reagan Library, the National Gallery of Art, the Metropolitan Opera and hundreds of other cultural institutions across the United States.
Here in Florida, you may have come across my jewelry at the Baker Museum in Naples, the Vero Beach Museum or the Norton Museum of Art in West Palm Beach.
It has taken decades to build this reputation – relationship by relationship, shipment by shipment.
Today, under current tariff policies, my business is in jeopardy.
I recently submitted an affidavit to the Supreme Court – as it considers the legality of the president’s tariffs – to help it understand what these tariffs are doing to businesses like mine, and why I may not survive them.
Tariffs disrupting my business
In the past two months, my company has been inundated with customs notices demanding tariff payments.
This chaos was triggered by a routine shipment valued at almost $8,000 that U.S. Customs held for six weeks while questioning if my pricing was accurate.
Without notifying me, it returned the entire shipment to my supplier.
To avoid a complete shutdown, my supplier split the order into hundreds of smaller packages, each under $700.
But this created a new disaster of paying a 50% tariff on each order.
I have now paid more in tariffs than the cost of my original order, and I still do not have all my goods.
Every time U.S. Customs holds a shipment, I am told to resubmit the same paperwork and documents – tax ID, proof of incorporation, IRS forms, invoices – that I have already sent repeatedly.
The prices on my products are accurate.
Yet my integrity is questioned again and again by people who know nothing about my business, my supply chain or my longstanding record of compliance.
I am treated as if I am attempting to deceive the government when I am simply trying to run a legitimate business.
This has left my business in disarray.
Shops depend on reliability: their schedules are tight, their ordering cycles are precise and their margins are thin.
Now I can’t give customers a basic estimate of what will arrive or when.
I have reordered merchandise multiple times in hopes that at least one shipment might get through.
I have been forced to raise prices – but I have worked to avoid larger increases to protect my relationships.
However, the tariff costs far exceed what I can recoup.
Every morning, I wake up wondering which shipment customs will confiscate next and how much more documentation it will demand.
The stress has affected my mental health, and for the first time I feel I no longer have control over the company I created.
Suffocating under fees
Supporters of tariffs argue that they protect American workers and industries.
That may be true in certain sectors like steel, autos and consumer electronics.
But costume jewelry is not one of those industries.
It is dominated not by multinational corporations but by small creative businesses, many of them run by women, operating on narrow margins and dependent on predictable imports.
We design our products in America and sell them to American institutions that rely on us for their own revenue. We are part of the cultural economy – not adversaries of it.
The current tariff structure does not protect my business; it punishes it.
It does not strengthen the American economy; it undermines it.
By casting suspicion on small importers, demanding duplicative documentation and applying blanket tariffs without regard to scale, U.S. Customs has created a system that feels less like economic policy and more like arbitrary enforcement.
What is happening to my business is not a policy debate on cable news.
It is a small American company suffocating under fees it can’t absorb, delays it can’t prevent and bureaucratic hurdles it can’t navigate.
Without relief, SEA LILY may not survive.
Small businesses are the backbone of American commerce.
We are innovators, risk takers and job creators.
But no business, no matter how well-run or well-respected, can survive under a system that drains its resources while denying it the ability to deliver its products.
If these tariffs continue as they are, many small businesses will not make it. And America will be poorer for it.
Lorraine Sayer is a small business owner based in Lakewood Ranch.






