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June 29, 2007
States
Target Big-Box Stores
Maine Is First to Require That Wal-Mart, Rivals
Undergo Impact Studies
By KRIS HUDSON
June 29, 2007; Page A8
Opponents' efforts to thwart the expansion of Wal-Mart Stores
Inc. and other big-box retailers have graduated from city-council
chambers to the statehouse.
Maine
Gov. John Baldacci last week signed into law a measure requiring developers
of retail stores exceeding 75,000 square feet to conduct studies gauging
the project's impact on municipal services, the environment and local
businesses. The proposed store can't be approved if the studies find it
is likely to cause a quantifiable, "undue adverse impact" on
more than one of those fronts and is expected to have a harmful effect
on the community overall.
- What's
New: Maine lawmakers passed a law requiring stricter local
scrutiny of big-box retail development.
- What's
at Stake:
Lawmakers in six other states have considered similar bills in the past
two years, signaling an increase in statewide interest in what is traditionally
a local issue.
- What's
Next: Opponents plan to revisit the Maine law in next year's
session, and bill sponsors in Montana intend to reintroduce their bills
next year.
The
Maine legislation is the first state law of its kind in the U.S., but
similar measures have been proposed in six other states in the past two
years. A bill made it through the California State Legislature last year
but was vetoed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. Another measure is under
review in New Jersey.
The
impact-study bills are the latest twist in efforts to use legislation
to curtail the development of Wal-Mart and other chains, like Home
Depot Inc. and Target Corp. , that commonly
build large, stand-alone stores.
For
decades, such retailers have contended with restrictions imposed by cities
and towns on the size, appearance and number of their stores. A few municipalities
have enacted bans on further development of big-box stores; San Diego's
mayor this month vetoed a bill aimed at banning such stores that sell
groceries, but the city council is scheduled to vote July 10 on an override.
Statewide legislation aimed at big-box retailers has proven largely unsuccessful.
Maryland lawmakers last year overrode a gubernatorial veto to enact a
law specifying how much money large employers -- namely Wal-Mart -- should
spend on workers' health-care coverage. An AFL-CIO effort to replicate
the law in three dozen other states failed, and a federal judge struck
down the Maryland law as conflicting with federal law.
The
Maine law and bills resembling it show that lawmakers remain leery of
large-format retailers even as the largest -- Wal-Mart and Home Depot
-- have reined in their U.S. expansion plans. Last year, the 10 largest
U.S. retailers accounted for 25% of the nation's retail purchases, excluding
cars, up from 18% in 1996.
Chain
proliferation "really is changing the dynamic of the face of the
country in a sense, with employment practices and buying habits at both
the individual and [corporate level]," says New Jersey Assemblyman
Jeff Van Drew, a Democratic co-sponsor of an impact-study bill in that
state. "Part of that is the effect these stores have not only in
your community but on neighboring communities."
The
New Jersey bill would require an impact study for any proposed store exceeding
130,000 square feet.
The
Maine law requires developers proposing any retail store that exceeds
a 75,000-square-foot threshold to deposit $40,000 with the state for use
by the governing city or town. That money is earmarked to pay for a study
of the project's impact on municipal services, traffic, local employment
and nearby bodies of water, among other things. If the study finds a quantifiable
adverse impact in at least two cases, and also predicts the project will
cause more general harm to the community, the project can't be approved.
The
law's proponents -- including its chief architect, the Institute for Local
Self-Reliance, an advocacy group for small local businesses -- say the
statute gives municipal leaders a wide array of data to use in making
their decisions and requires them to consider the regional impact of each
project. Supporters acknowledge that some of the law's criteria are subjective,
but they add that such is also the case with Maine's established standards
for development of housing subdivisions and other real-estate projects.
Maine business groups attempted unsuccessfully to modify the bill to allow
cities and towns to opt out of the requirements. They say they intend
to revisit the law during Maine's next legislative session, which begins
in January. "We have felt that some of the groups supporting the
legislation probably will not end here and probably will go after even
smaller development in the future," says Jim McGregor, executive
vice president of the Maine Merchants Association.
The
Maine law has attracted attention far beyond the state's boundaries. The
Retail Industry Leaders Association, a trade group of large national retailers,
blasts the law as "fundamentally anticompetitive, anticonsumer legislation."
A
Montana measure mirroring the Maine law died in committee in the state's
latest legislative session. It would have required stores exceeding 75,000
square feet to meet economic and environmental standards and provide minimum
pay and benefits for their employees in the state.
The vetoed California bill aimed to require developers of stores exceeding
100,000 square feet to fund an economic-impact study. Sponsor Richard
Alarcón, a former state senator now on the Los Angeles City Council,
says despite the veto, the state bill served as a template for ordinances
in Los Angeles, Sacramento and Alameda County, Calif.
"I
am unable to support this bill that effectively sends a message to retailers
and others that California is closed for business," Gov. Schwarzenegger
said in announcing the veto.
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