A Town Creates Its Own Department Store, by Amy Cortese (New York Times)
... So when Wal-Mart Stores came knocking, some here welcomed it. Others felt that the company’s plan to build a 120,000-square-foot supercenter would overwhelm their village, with its year-round population of 5,000, and put local merchants out of business.
It’s a situation familiar to many communities these days. But rather than accept their fate, residents of Saranac Lake did something unusual: they decided to raise capital to open their own department store. Shares in the store, priced at $100 each, were marketed to local residents as a way to “take control of our future and help our community,” said Melinda Little, a Saranac Lake resident who has been involved in the effort from the start. “The idea was, this is an investment in the community as well as the store” ...
... Think of it as the retail equivalent of the Green Bay Packers — a department store owned by its customers that will not pick up and leave when a better opportunity comes along or a corporate parent takes on too much debt.
New Albany is a state of mind … but whose? Since 2004, we’ve been observing the contemporary scene in this slowly awakening old river town. If it’s true that a pre-digital stopped clock is right twice a day, when will New Albany learn to tell time?
Monday, November 14, 2011
Wal-Mart repelled in Saranac Lake, NY: “This is more authentic capitalism.”
Capitalism as a model for empowering community rather than promoting exploitation via the Wal-Mart way? Sounds suspicious to me.
I went to college not too far from Saranac Lake and have been there a bunch of times. Wow. This is so cool. It is such a delightful little town nestled in the mountains. A Wal-Mart there sounds positively awful. Great decision by that community.
ReplyDeleteThat's so flipping awesome!
ReplyDelete