I had a colleague today point out that the use of well in the following sentence is a typo. I think it makes sense but now I'm second guessing myself. Is this correct? If not, what would be a better way to say this:
Well these rules have been in place for a while, shipping companies and businesses are experiencing delays as a result of incorrectly processed shipments.
If you want the full context of this sentence here it is:
For several months now special restrictions have been in place for exports of personal protective equipment (PPE), medical, and general COVID-19 relief supplies from China. Well these rules have been in place for a while, shipping companies and businesses are experiencing delays as a result of incorrectly processed shipments.
EDIT / UPDATE
I took Jay's advice at first and reworded the sentence into the following:
While these rules have been in place for some time, shipping companies and businesses are experiencing delays as a result of incorrectly processed shipments.
I really like Apple Cola's suggestion though. To help the flow of the sentence, which was brought up by Chronocidal, I added the word "still", replaced "a while" with "some time", replaced "rules" with "restrictions" so it fits into the full context of the paragraph, and removed the "shipping companies" part since I technically only need to mention businesses here. The sentence now reads:
Although these restrictions have been in place for some time [now], businesses are still experiencing delays as a result of incorrectly processed shipments.