My take on the Target closing is that there was no fair warning to the community that 
the story was failing. Surely Target has a duty to its shareholders to expect 
performing stores. However, in situations where a store is a vital part of a community 
in so far as providing jobs in a low income  neighborhood and merchandise in a low 
income neighborhood, I think the corporation should have said to the community: "Look 
this store is failing! Unless it performs better over the next (fill in the blank) 
months, we will have to close it. Community, we need your help to turn the situation 
around." I know this would be a novel approach to corporate planning, but I believe 
more communication and less secrecy between corporations and low income communities 
would go a long way to stabilize and improve urban areas that need improvement.

Bill Dooley
Kenny

-----Original Message-----
From: GearHeadGrrrl [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, June 01, 2003 9:03 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Mpls] Northside Target- a Postmortem


        The Northside's target has been slowly dying for years, but recent 
events in the Northside have hastened it's demise. Let us here attempt 
a brief postmortem examination of the causes of this tragedy.

        Primary cause of death was Target's own mismanagement. Target's buyers 
seem to have been hired away from Disneyland. What other store would 
stock paintbrushes, but no paint? A whole aisle of car washes and 
waxes, but no spark plugs? Working class Northsiders have blue jeans, 
work boots, and tools on their shopping lists. Target at best could 
provide only poor quality imitations of the above if they stocked said 
neccessities at all. WalMart beat Target hands down on thoroughness of 
inventory and quality, and they're just a short drive out to Brooklyn 
Park. So Target slowly lost there target market. To add insult to 
injury Target canabalized their Northside store with a halfway 
functional store over Northeast in the Quarry and a flagship store 
downtown.

        About a year ago I started writing about the growing epidemic of crime 
on the Northside and predicting the loss of many Northside anchors if 
the city did not act to stem said crime wave. Since then our mayor and 
city council have largely responded with denial. However, the mayor 
must be commended for quite properly taking Target to task for walking 
a way from the Northside. Kudos must also be given to our state 
representative and several community leaders for taking on Target over 
the closing. If R.T. and the Council had only acted a year ago they 
might not be in the position they are now.

        Though weakened by mismanagement the Northside Target ultimately 
succumbed to a loss of Northsiders to shop there. I've wriiten before 
about the outmigration occurring on the Northside- in my block alone we 
have 3 empty houses and many empty apartments. For the Northsiders left 
Target is too scary a destination. It's customers having been 
discouraged, lured, and literally chased away the Northside Target has 
become a pretty quiet place.

        By now I suspect there's crack houses on the Northside doing more 
business than Target's store. Which says something about the direction 
the Northside's economy is sadly headed.

        hanging on in Hawthorne,

                Dyna Sluyter

         

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TEMPORARY REMINDER:
1. Don't feed the troll! Ignore obvious flame-bait.
2. If you don't like what's being discussed here, don't complain - change the subject 
(Mpls-specific, of course.)

________________________________

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Post messages to: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subscribe, Unsubscribe, Digest, and more: http://e-democracy.org/mpls

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