Florida News Connection
March 22, 2023
By: Trimmel Gomes
Dollar-store chains are rapidly growing across the country, with
more locations than McDonald's, Starbucks, Target and Walmart combined,
according to a new report, which claims
their rapid growth is due in part to targeting low-income communities.
The report from the Institute for Local Self-Reliance claimed Dollar General
and Dollar Tree -- which owns Family Dollar -- choose disenfranchised areas,
and Black and Latino neighborhoods in or near urban centers, to set up shop.
Aaron Weber, a concerned citizen in Micanopy, said he fought a dollar store
entering his community, based on what he argued are plaguing America with
increased risks of obesity, diabetes and cancer.
"They are a public health disaster from what they sell," Weber
stressed. "I'd rather have a liquor store in my community than a dollar
store, because liquor stores only sell alcohol, and dollar stores sell alcohol
plus a lot of processed foods, a lot of stuff that's high in sugar, cigarettes
too."
The chains have become a go-to grocery destination for cash-strapped shoppers,
though Dollar Tree recently announced it will no longer sell eggs because the
cost skyrocketed during the fall. In a statement, the Dollar General
Corporation said the Institute "is not a reliable source for information
regarding Dollar General, or our efforts to meet the value and convenience
needs of millions of Americans for nearly 85 years."
Kennedy Smith, senior researcher at the Institute, said its investigation
indicates the stores are a threat to existing businesses, especially food
stores.
"And the concern there is that, by edging out stores that provide good,
healthy food options for communities, they are actually creating food deserts, or
exacerbating food deserts that may already exist," Smith explained.
Dollar General said it offers fresh produce in more than 3,000 stores, with
plans to do so in about 2,000 more this year. The company added its stores are
often in locations other retailers have chosen not to serve.
Smith, however, describes tactics used to drive local grocers and retailers out
of business. The report said since 2019, people in 75 cities and towns have
organized to block new locations being built.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service. Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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