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Toledo Talk   (musing about Lake Erie West and beyond)
Tools
Documenting the region
Include everyone
Buy local
Philosophy
BALLE
Westgate case study
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Lake Erie West Projects

Some thoughts ...

Use political grassroots organization principles for documenting the LEW region, informing its residents about the positives of regionalism, and possibly raising money to become a political action committee that supports candidates that speak regionally.

Tools

Documenting the region

Brake the process down to the zip code level. Every zip code would be covered. At least one person would be assigned to document one zip code. If more than person wants to cover a zip code, fine. The individuals should coordinate their efforts to maximize their time. If a person wants to cover more than one zip code, that's acceptable too. But no zip code should go undocumented. And each zip code area needs to be thoroughly documented.

The documentation for each zip would include :

Upload photos and videos to sharing sites like flickr and YouTube. The images and photos can be imported into the LEW blog/wiki Web site mentioned above.

Include everyone

Employ ideas from Wisdom of the Crowds : Why the Many Are Smarter Than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies and Nations.

Input is needed from a wide variety of people, including:

Buy local

Philosophy

The concept of "buy local" cannot be an extremist viewpoint, otherwise it could deter outside investment. Chain stores are a fact of life, but it seems the small, local, independent business owners are disappearing from our landscape.

People will say it's about price competition. If a local business cannot offer goods or services at a reasonable price, then customers will go to a chain that can.

Much like development vs the environment, a balance needs to be created between the chain stores and local business owners. Otherwise, our region will continue to lose its identity, and we end up looking like every other Sprawlsville in the country.

BALLE

Business Alliance for Local Living Economies

Web site for BALLE is http://www.livingeconomies.org

Ann Arbor has a chapter called Think Local First. Toledo is forming a chapter. More are needed in the region, and they need to communicate with each other as part of this Lake Erie West region.

A solution could be as simple as informing the public as to who the local businesses are. Chain store names are easier for us to remember and recognize. We see their stores in other communities, and we may see their ads on TV or in magazines. It's easy and convenient for us to think only about chain stores. It's less to remember. Shopping a big chain store could mean fewer trips or stops with our automobile.

The public needs to be educated on why it's important to buy from local businesses at least sometimes by comparing the amount of money that remains in the region when buying from a local business versus a chain. Track the life of the "dollar" when its spent at a local business versus a chain store.

Westgate case study

We need someone or some group to produce a report detailing the life of the Westgate shopping area.

Westgate is interesting because it's a great example of reuse. Instead of abandoning the shopping area and building on farmland, the owners decided to start over on the same property.

The new Westgate development, however, may have underachieved when it comes to supporting local businesses. A couple local businesses that were in the old Westgate will remain in the new development, but many of the old local businesses were priced out of the new Westgate.

Why didn't the Westgate owners, Abbell Credit Corporation, offer the local businesses a reduced lease rate for the first year, maybe at the same rate they paid in the old development, and then incrementally increase their lease rate over a three-year period until the local businesses were paying the same rate as a new tenant? In other words, give the old tenants a chance to survive in the new development. If they cannot survive, then a new tenant, probably a chain, would easily take their place.

New developments should not live 100% by the phrase "Whatever the market will bear." That's fine for bringing in chains, but why not give the local business owners a chance to see what they can do by either offering temporarily reduced lease rates or by allowing the local business owners to defer full payments until a later time, dependent upon the local business's success? If taxpayer-funded incentives are given to developers, then developers need to give some consideration to supporting our local businesses.

created by jr on Mar 16, 2007 at 11:30:59 am
updated by jr on Mar 16, 2007 at 12:17:05 pm
    Comments: 0

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