Thread regarding Walmart layoffs

When Walmart Leaves: For a small town in Texas, Walmart's 30yr presence was a point of civic pride. Then, 18 months ago, all that changed

EDNA, Texas - Early on the morning of June 20, 2018, Joe Hermes got a call from an executive in Walmart’s corporate offices. The caller was breaking some bad news: After 36 years, Walmart was closing its Edna store.

Mr. Hermes, who had been mayor of the small Texas city for about as long as the Walmart had been open, asked the man if he was joking.

“It was like getting hit by a bomb,” he recalled.

Walmart was Edna’s engine — one of its largest employers, a big taxpayer, a 24-hour social hub in a community of about 5,700 people surrounded by rice fields, ranches and grassland. The store, according to many patrons and employees, seemed successful, which made its closing even more alarming. Maybe Walmart knew something about Edna, or its economy, that the residents did not.
Case studies and books have examined what happens to a community when a Walmart muscles in, how the retailer uses its enormous leverage to lower prices and undercut competitors. But less has been said about what happens when Walmart suddenly packs up and leaves.

Edna, it turns out, was able to pull through in ways that may have made the city stronger.

The closing of the Edna Walmart is not a story about a retailer struggling to adjust to the e-commerce revolution. Nationally, Walmart has achieved some of its best sales growth in years, transforming its Supercenters into digital retailing meccas, where shelf-scanning robots roam the aisles and shoppers idling in the parking lot can order avocados on their phones and have them delivered to their cars.
But the Edna store, a much smaller format built in 1982, did not offer many of those services. And with several Supercenters within roughly 25 miles, Walmart no longer needed Edna. Walmart declined to say exactly why the company left town.
A spokesman said such decisions were “based on a number of factors, including the financial performance of the store and whether we have other stores nearby that can best serve our customers.” The company offered to relocate many of the Edna store’s roughly 90 employees and transfer its customers’ pr-scrip-ions to other stores.
Edna is a proud place. A downtown theater glows with rainbow lights, and the tower on top of the building spells out the city’s name high above a ticket booth covered in cobwebs. The theater has not shown movies regularly for years, though its new owner has told residents that he plans to start screenings soon.
American flags fly along Main Street, remnants of a policy requiring them until an “honorable peace” had been achieved in Vietnam, Mr. Hermes said, or all the troops had come home.
Still, with Walmart leaving, Edna’s residents worried about where they would buy their medication; what would happen to the store’s employees; how the city would make up for the lost sales tax revenue.
On the week the closing was announced, Andrew Schroer, the pastor at Redeemer Lutheran, one of the city’s 26 churches, tried to comfort his congregation in a sermon, as well as in the regular newspaper column he writes in several Texas newspapers.
“Don’t worry when the local Walmart closes,” wrote Mr. Schroer, who moved to Edna from Miami in 2003 and has turned down nearly a dozen church assignments to stay here.
“God will find a way to provide what you need,” Mr. Schroer wrote of the store’s closing. “You will live through it. You will live beyond it.”
It is a roughly 100-mile drive south to Edna from Houston. On Lloyd Bentsen Memorial Highway, two weeks before Christmas, the big-city sprawl gives way to open fields lying brown and empty, like a drab patchwork quilt.
Edna appears after you cross a man-made lake and is centered on a business district that includes a nail salon, a flower shop, the “Hot Bonds” bail bonds office, several empty storefronts and the county jail. A few weeks ago, the city held its Christmas parade, called Miracle on Main Street, along this route.
The town was founded in 1882 and named after the daughter of an Italian count, who came to Texas to build a railroad stretching from Mexico to New York. Two nearby towns are named after the count’s other daughters, Inez and Louise.
The count imported hundreds of Italian laborers and fed them, according to a history of Jackson County, largely with macaroni. The railroad was nicknamed the Macaroni line. But the count left the railroad after laying only about 90 miles of track.
One hundred years later, another entrepreneur arrived — this time in a prop plane.

He was tall, wearing work boots and a blue denim jacket and leaning up against a twin-engine Cessna at the Edna airport, recalled Richard Browning, an Edna resident and former mayor, who had just landed his own plane.
The man introduced himself as Sam Walton and said he owned a chain of discount stores called Walmart. Mr. Walton had flown in because he was looking to build a store in Edna. Mr. Walton told Mr. Browning that he needed a ride into town.
“I thought he was a cattleman,” said Mr. Browning, who is now 85.

After pushing his plane into his hangar, Mr. Browning drove Mr. Walton to a real estate office and dropped him off.
The Walmart, store No. 474, soon opened on a large lot next to the highway exit.

It quickly became the place to shop for appliances, clothing, children’s shoes and Christmas trees. Eventually, it added a pharmacy and then groceries. By the 1990s, many of the city’s small clothing and food stores had trouble competing with Walmart’s low prices.
For those who worked in the Walmart, the experience could be mixed. Most of the employees were full time, but a number were part time, and, for them, some benefits were limited. For many, the job could be rewarding and less physically taxing than working in the plastics plants, the area’s largest employers.

Everyone has a story about the store. There was a mother whose son suffered from mysteriously high fevers. She would run to Walmart to pick up ibuprofen and a Thomas the Tank Engine toy to cheer him up.

A young woman with a kidney transplant took comfort knowing the pharmacy was only a short drive from her house. A city councilman walked the aisles on his lunch break not to shop, but to talk and blow off steam. The owner of a downtown workshop that makes custom coffins picked up art supplies in the middle of the night.

And then the store was gone.

Chris Lundstrom, the editor/publisher of The Jackson County Herald-Tribune, Edna’s weekly newspaper, recalled how her newsroom went silent the morning Walmart called to say the store was closing. Ms. Lundstrom bought notebooks and pens at the Walmart Supercenter in Victoria, and resold them at the newspaper offices, which double as an office supply store.
A Family Dollar opened up across the street from the DG, which remodeled and added items.
The new Edna Pharmacy celebrated its grand opening in April offering traditional Ethiopian coffee and snacks, a nod to the store owner’s family heritage, said Lori Hernandez, who works there.
This month, an Alamo Lumber, a family-owned chain based in San Antonio, opened at the site of the former W. The store has brightly lit aisles stacked with PVC pipes and chain saws, and smells of freshly cut wood. Eleven people work there.

“It is really nice to have them,” said Ms. Lundstrom. “But it’s not the same as W.”
Walmart has relocated about 45 of the 90 employees who worked in Edna to other area stores. Not all of them have stayed with the company.

Eric Wade, 35, took a job unloading trucks at a Supercenter (40 mi away), but he quit. He felt the huge store lacked camaraderie among the employees. He now works at Caterpillar making excavators. Some former workers the W have told friends that the drive to their new jobs has been wearing on their cars and the cost of gas was eating into their wages.

A few have ended up finding work in Edna. Aubrey Garcia, 25, who used to work in the Walmart pharmacy, now delivers flowers for a shop downtown. Ms. Webster, the chatty employee in the automotive department, checks people into the exercise room at the hospital.

Many Edna residents say they refuse to shop at W ever again. But others admit that they often drive to shop in the Supercenters in larger towns.
This fall, Edna received a pleasant surprise. Sales tax revenue did not drop the way city officials feared it would after W left. To many, the numbers showed that Edna’s retail stores had filled the void.
“People learned they need to shop at home,” said Mr. Hermes, the former mayor.
The revenue numbers also likely include the purchases Edna residents made on Amazon and other large e-commerce sites. Neither the state nor the city breaks out how much was spent online versus in local stores. So Edna may never know for sure what drove the rebound in retail sales after W left.
“From my perspective,” said Mr. Schroer, the pastor. “God provided. I truly believe that.”

Source: NY Times Archived at http://archive.is/Q1jRH
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| 2241 views | | 8 replies (last January 13, 2020) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+12I1k1ea

8 replies (most recent on top)

@eegp - not sure what your smokin'.....I don't know may small town retailers that offer great pay and benefits...now if you are talking about manufacturers that is different. Although, I don't know may small town manufacturers that make their own junk to sell......The stores that want to compete will find their niche that does not involve Walmart, Target or any other big box retailer....the rest that want to compete with them will just whine :)

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Post ID: @hdjd+12I1k1ea

@Atcl

‘Yeah it keeps money in the community, but also takes money from my pocket.’

sigh

This short sighted thinking right here has led to the death of the middle class.

Let me explain it to you. Sure you may pay a little more for goods. But with more employment options, you’d make more money and have a better quality of life because there’d be competition for your labor.

With Walmart being the only game in town, you may pay less for groceries...but you make a lot less too. And you have no alternative employer if you don’t like their treatment of you because Walmart is the only option for jobs. God help you if the management of your local store is toxic. Because that never happens, right?

All this is in addition to the fact that small businesses keep money in the community because they enrich the people who actually live there.

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Post ID: @eegp+12I1k1ea

@12I1k1ea-4rfh - Some of what you are stating is correct but Walmart is not fully responsible for putting small business out. You have to look at the hours that they operate - Most small town businesses are open from 9 to 5 - When do you think the normal person works? They typically work from 8 or 9 in the morning until around 5 in the evening - when does that give them time to shop with the Mom & Pops? During their lunch hour? There are a number of small businesses that have tailored their hours to be 10 to 7 and they are doing quite well. You may say that Walmart is the death of small businesses but they are equally to blame - Walmart does not sell every item in their stores - if the small businesses change their assortment they can draw plenty of customers to their locations - Small business has to be willing to change their mindset if they wish to compete - Why would I want to pay 1.5 times the price Walmart sells for in a Mom and Pop store? Yes it helps keep money in the community but it also takes money from my pocket - Find a niche that Walmart does not compete in that serves your community and I guarantee the Mom and Pops will continue to stay in business.

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Post ID: @atcl+12I1k1ea

This is one of many reasons why I no longer shop at Walmart unless absolutely necessary (for example, if I need something that day and the other stores in the area don't have them). I avoid this company like the plague otherwise!

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Post ID: @6lxz+12I1k1ea

Walmart and Amazon are a plague on America. If you want to know where all the good paying jobs went, they got exported overseas so that Walmart could sell cheap c-ap to main street and make an extra buck.

With so many of the good paying jobs gone, employers have stolen workers blind in terms of wages and benefits and have turned the working class into wage slaves.

Don’t believe it? Look at what happened in this small town once Walmart left. One employer replaced by many, which is good for workers. And tax revenue remains the same.

How many small businesses did Walmart put under? America went from having families in every town making profit and spending it back in their community to all the profit going to a single family hoarding the wealth of an entire nation’s commerce.

Both Walmart AND Amazon should be broken up. It’d be the best thing for the consumer.

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Post ID: @4rfh+12I1k1ea

we have two in Greenwood SC you can have one. would love a Target !!!

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Post ID: @iip+12I1k1ea

A TL;DR would have been appreciated.

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Post ID: @kav+12I1k1ea

As Walmart abandons these small towns, it is abandoning the backbone of the customer base that made it what is is today.

It is also providing fertile ground for the dollar chains to further root.

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Post ID: @sco+12I1k1ea

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