Minnesotans spurred on by anxiety and uncertainty streamed into stores to close out the week in a holiday-like shopping frenzy of stocking up on essentials.
Parking lots were crowded to overflowing and checkout lines were long at big-box stores around the Twin Cities and smaller towns as people came to grips with the possibility that they could have to shelter for some time from the coronavirus.
"This is worse than Christmas," said Gina Jenkins of Waverly as she filled her SUV at a Costco in St. Louis Park. "The greeter was yelling 'No toilet paper or paper towels' to people at the entrance."
Jenkins said she waited in line to park at the store and took 30 minutes to get through the checkout line.
The run to build "pandemic pantries" began two weeks ago but accelerated this week as more Americans became sick, financial markets trembled, travel plunged and business, sports and entertainment events shut down across the country.
As the week went on, businesses began following one another in encouraging people to work from home. In downtown Minneapolis on Friday, offices, skyways and restaurants had noticeably thinned out.
At Chameleon Shoppes on the skyway level of the IDS Center, which exhibits goods from seven female- and minority-owned retailers, two of the owners said Friday that walk-in traffic was light.
Among larger retailers Friday, store after store was low or out of stock on paper products, canned soup, rice, pasta and bleach. Earlier this week, some retailers started putting limits on purchases of paper products, hand sanitizers and face wipes.