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<text id=93TT0445>
<title>
Nov. 01, 1993: They're Up Against The Wal
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Nov. 01, 1993 Howard Stern & Rush Limbaugh
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
RETAILING, Page 56
They're Up Against The Wal
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Communities are fighting to keep out mega-retailers like Wal-Mart
</p>
<p>By SOPHFRONIA SCOTT GREGORY--With reporting by Patrick E. Cole/Los Angeles, Leslie Whitaker/Chicago
and Tom Witkowski/Boston
</p>
<p> Wal-Mart, the retail discount giant, was prepared for just
about any misgiving the residents of Greenfield, Massachusetts,
might have. In exchange for turning a 63-acre lot into a 121,267-sq.-ft.
store, they would pay the town $100,000 in annual taxes and
cover much needed road improvements too. The store even agreed
to spring for an archaeological dig on the site, once an Indian
campground. "All people were thinking was, `This is where I'm
going to get cheap underwear,'" says resident Al Norman.
</p>
<p> That is, until Norman got a gander at an artist's sketch of
the proposed store. "It made me sick," he says. "There was this
three-level building, this antiseptic, big white monster. It
was like letting a 300-lb. gorilla into your living room." But
town leaders were already wooed and won, giving Wal-Mart the
desired zoning change for the site from industrial to commercial.
Norman and like-minded neighbors mobilized quickly, forming
the "We're Against the Wal Committee" and bombarding the area
with bumper stickers, lawn signs and newspaper ads showing people
the store was so big that three baseball stadiums the size of
Boston's Fenway Park could fit on the land.
</p>
<p> When Norman and his neighbors joined forces, they also joined
thousands of others across the country in a grass-roots movement
that a few years ago seemed most unlikely: fighting major retailers
trying to move into their neighborhoods. After years of passively
accepting--sometimes even welcoming--the likes of Wal-Mart,
Home Depot, Payless Drug Stores, K Mart and Price Club, residents
are now protesting in the streets and hectoring at town planning
meetings. They feel they are now wise to the disadvantages such
stores bring: increased traffic, air pollution and cannibalization
of their hometown retailers. Add modern media savvy to the mix,
and you have a group, regardless of their number, that can make
a stink big enough to bring them nationwide attention...and victory.
</p>
<p> Last week the people of Greenfield (pop. 18,000) delivered Wal-Mart
its third defeat this year when residents voted to keep the
discount retailer from building the gorilla in their midst.
Some 60% of the town turned out for the vote, preventing the
measure that would have rezoned the proposed site by a slim
nine-vote margin. Similar resistance in Westford, Massachusetts
(pop. 16,000), and North Olmsted, Ohio (pop. 34,000), has led
Wal-Mart to withdraw its interest there as well.
</p>
<p> The protests have grown in proportion to the relentless, expansionary
march of behemoth retailers. Hundreds of new megastores are
opening annually: major retailers spent over $11 billion in
1992 on capital expenditures for new stores, 16% more than in
1991. Wal-Mart, which began the year with 1,880 stores, now
has 1,954, and will add 150 by January. Home Depot is expanding
at a rate of one store a week.
</p>
<p> Greatest resistance has come in the Northeast. After being listed
as an endangered natural entity by the National Trust for Historic
Preservation, the state of Vermont has been fighting Wal-Mart
with true Yankee moxie. Home Depot has likewise encountered
lawsuits from the people of West Roxbury, Massachusetts, and
Ozone Park in Queens, New York. What irks many citizens is the
apparent ease with which the megastores are granted building
permits without the customary impact studies, or in other cases,
given permits in apparent violation of local zoning laws. Sometimes
construction is under way before residents even realize a store
is coming.
</p>
<p> In Ozone Park residents rallied under the banner of the Coalition
for Community Preservation and Stabilization after a 150,000-sq.-ft.
store began to go up behind a row of small, Archie Bunker-type
homes. The coalition claimed that Home Depot gained its building
permit without having undergone New York City's Uniform Land
Use Review Process. It also says the store will devote 40,000
sq. ft. of space to building materials--far more than the
10,000-sq.-ft. maximum required by law. Jesse Masyr, counsel
for Home Depot, called the charges "specious."
</p>
<p> "The citizens of Queens are getting a raw deal," says Nell Parker,
a spokeswoman for Atlanta-based Home Depot. She points out that
most of the coalition members are hardware-store owners and
only care about saving their own businesses. "People are paying
expensive prices for building materials there." Counters Brian
Herman, a lawyer and hardware-store owner involved with the
coalition: "Everybody knows they're out to kill the little guy.
That store changes the face of the economic ecosystem for the
whole community."
</p>
<p> But other experts, like Leonard Berry, director of Texas A&M's
Center for Retailing Studies, believe victories by grass-roots
groups like the coalition deprive residents of the opportunity
to buy goods and services more cheaply, especially in urban
areas like New York City and Los Angeles, which are monopolized
by small, more expensive specialty retailers. "For towns to
deny entry into the market is contrary to free enterprise,"
Berry says.
</p>
<p> And while the grass-roots groups congratulate themselves and
advise neighboring communities to follow suit, other citizens,
like the 2,845 Greenfield residents who voted in favor of Wal-Mart,
feel less euphoric. They had been looking forward to the economic
boost the store could have provided. "The town of Greenfield
could use the jobs," says Alfred Havens, president of the town
council. Major retailers are big job generators in today's economy.
Wal-Mart is the nation's second largest private employer after
General Motors.
</p>
<p> Recent studies also weaken the argument that the large retailers
hurt the economy of the communities. Kenneth Stone, an economics
professor at Iowa State, conducted a study of Iowa towns with
Wal-Marts and found that while the number of small retailers
did decline, other business was attracted to the area. "Apparently
Wal-Mart stores attracted customers into town from a greater
radius than had occurred before their entry," Stone says.
</p>
<p> Armed with such conclusions, the big retailers view their setbacks
with less alarm, knowing there is fertile ground elsewhere.
"For every Greenfield, there are literally scores of other communities
who would give their eyetooth for a Wal-Mart store," says Wal-Mart
spokesman Don Shinkle. "You must understand that the minority
is very vocal."
</p>
<p> Based on the numbers, the discount retailers may appear to have
the better side of the economic argument. But for many small-town
residents, there are less tangible but still important issues.
"There's one thing you can't buy in a Wal-Mart," says Greenfield's
Norman. "That's small-town quality of life. And once you lose
it, you can't get it back at any price." As any wise shopper
knows, you get what you pay for.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>