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Walmart reps question early reaction to plans in Powhatan
Published: November 04, 2009

By Michael Copley
Staff Writer

The fight against Walmart in Powhatan, and the argument that drives it, is an emotional knee-jerk reaction void of facts, Walmart representatives said.

Walmart spokesman Keith Morris said it’s troubling anytime people support or oppose a plan “before any specifics of the plan” are made public.

He said “I feel the same way about people who are inclined towards something without knowing all the facts…All you have is perceptions meeting head on, and there might not be a right or wrong when everything is based on perception.”

Morris points to other locations, places that have struggled with the same issues Powhatan faces now, when he talks about Walmart’s effect on communities. In Powhatan’s case, he pointed to Ashland.

He noted a recent Richmond Times-Dispatch article that features Ashland’s still-functioning business community, in a town that fought Walmart almost a decade ago.

“If there are some [communities] that have failed [because of Walmart] then let’s put the cause and effect on the table,” he said. “But no one has done that yet.”

But Powhatan Grow Smart Leader Greg Ownby dismissed Morris’ analysis. He said “Yeah [opposition in Powhatan] is not based on the facts [Walmart] gives us.”

And Ownby has examples of his own. He mentioned Farmville- a place where he says the local business community has suffered in Walmart’s wake.

An open conversation is likely the best way to address concerns and dispel alleged bad information, and Morris and others representing Walmart said the retailer is “cognizant” that people want to be informed, and made assurances that “There will be a lot of dialogue” with the Powhatan community.

“There’s a lot of real fear out there based on raw emotion,” said Morris, “That’s where the need for an open community forum comes from.”

But he said Walmart has to wait to have that conversation until the “business end of things has gone through.”

“Until we get there it doesn’t benefit anyone to have a meeting,” Morris said. “People would be coming there to hear tangible facts and if you’re not prepared, you look like you’re hiding something.”

And Ownby seemed comfortable with the idea of public meetings. “[Walmart] gets their turn to educate people with their facts and figures.”

Rob Shin, a spokesman for Walmart, talked to the Powhatan Chamber of Commerce in October but sources said his presentation- and his failure to answer specific questions- left more questions than answers.

Walmart committed to provide the board of supervisors with a cost-benefit analysis. Asked in mid-October about the status of that report, Walmart representatives said they were “Not prepared to answer that now,” but said it should be completed “in a about a week or so.”

District One Supervisor Joe Walton said last week he hadn’t heard anything from Walmart recently about plans to provide that study.

But those Walmart representatives had unofficial information they were ready to share.

One representative, who was not allowed to speak on the record, said some people “just like shopping at larger retailers,” while some prefer small, locally owned merchants.

He said a Walmart in Powhatan would not take away from existing businesses. Instead, a Powhatan-based Walmart would, in his estimation, keep shoppers- who now go to big-box retailers elsewhere-in the county.

“A Walmart in Powhatan isn’t going to change people’s spending habits. It won’t change people’s tastes,” he said.
Morris added, “People are leaving and taking their retail dollars outside the county…Our store can help fill a huge void. Local merchants stand to benefit from people staying in the county to shop.”

Ownby said that might be true but warned the drastically lower prices Walmart can offer might be too low for even “die hard” local shoppers to resist in hard financial times.

At an October 23 architectural review committee meeting that included Walmart designers, architects and the retailer’s lawyer, Ed Kidd, Powhatan committee members said they were “happy Walmart is looking here- happy any business is looking here.”

But they were clear that a Walmart in Powhatan would have to meet county standards aimed at keeping the big-box feel out of Powhatan, including a ban on franchise building design.

“We don’t want to see big box- visually,” comittee members said. “Take the big-box look and make it feel like smaller pieces.”

Walmart designers told committee members the prototype developed for Powhatan has a “pedestrian-friendly feel,” with more “visual interest” in its store design, including reduced signage, window features, canopy features, landscaping and lower entry ways.

Morris said “The design, as it exists now, is the first of its kind in the greater Richmond area. This will be even nicer than the Midlothian Village design.”

Kidd said the store design is the same as one intended for the Zion Cross Roads area, and a recent Walmart documentary shows stores in other parts of the country with the same scaled back, earth-tone design.

Kidd told the group it is “Hard for a national retailer to have store plans that never get duplicated.”

But Powhatan committee members challenged Walmart representatives “not to be something corporate in Powhatan. Be something new that other localities push to emulate. The work on the architecture end could attract a different kind of client than you have had in the past.”

Ownby said Powhatan Grow Smart has started looking past Walmart and the impacts to local merchants, and towards “bigger picture issues” and the potential for big-box development in the future.

Ownby said he plans to ask officials to defer judgment on Walmart’s rezoning request until a new comprehensive plan has been adopted.


Walmart’s Plan
According to store representatives, the Powhatan Walmart would be the smaller of two design types- a 150,000 square foot store with a 15,000 square foot out parcel on the south east corner of the property.

No specific plans exist yet for that out parcel. Keith Morris said it is a matter of looking at who is interested in occupying that space- “who’s not there that would like to be there,” he said. Morris indicated the occupant would likely be a small sit-down restaurant or a bank.

Walmart’s attorney Ed Kidd said his client will not likely give up plans for that out parcel. “From a cost perspective, it allows Walmart to recoup some of the cost” on what he said was a pricey land acquisition deal. “And they have limited it to one out parcel.”



Reader Comments


Brian French of Powhatan Today
Nov. 5, 2009, 08:42 AM

Scott, the Farmville WalMart Supercenter serves not only the small town of Farmville but two colleges and the surrounding counties - you won’t find another one near it until Blackstone, South Hill, Lynchburg and South Boston.


scott of powhatan
Nov. 5, 2009, 07:50 AM

Facts are not “I believe” or “imagine this” As far as the Farmville Wal-Mart when the first Farmville Wal-Mart opened you could not push a cart in the store because so many people were in the store. Now with the larger store it is still very crowded. I have to ask with that type of turnout does it seem that the people got what they wanted or the few that opposed it got what they wanted. I try to spend as much money inside Powhatan rather than going to Chesterfield. I have also shopped all over Powhatan looking for something and ended up at Wal-Mart before I found it. I keep hearing about the type of people that shop at Wal-Mart, guess what they live near you, they drive on the same roads and they get their gas and fast food at the same place as you. You don’t hear from them on here because they are poor and rather than a computer to play with they worry more about eating and making the buck go as far as it can. When the doors do open you will just be shopping with the guy you pass on rte 60 that was driving the old truck too slow……if you want to imagine something imagine he lives in that little house just outside of your big subdivision and believe this he did not want that subdivision coming in making the taxes on that little house more than what he paid for the house in the first place.


Robert
Nov. 4, 2009, 06:26 PM

If you don’t like the quality of life in Powhatan, then why are you here? 

What would Walmart bring to the county?  We don’t need their nice landscaping, their lighting, or their architecture.  I don’t personally believe that the minimum wage jobs they would bring are the answer to Powhatan’s problems, either.  What are we left with; cheap toilet paper and poor-quality household goods made in China?

If you’re complaining about the goods and services available in Powhatan, you should get involved in the community and try to develop a plan to get what you feel the county needs.  If you’re expecting Walmart to come in and solve Powhatan’s problems, I’m afraid you’re sadly mistaken.  If you’d prefer to have your goods and services 2 miles from your doorstep, I’m sure that Chesterfield County would love to have you.  And, they have plenty of houses for sale there.

As for me, there are some of us who like Powhatan just the way it is, without Walmart.


The Hudsucker Proxy
Nov. 4, 2009, 06:21 PM

It’s for the children! Smoke and mirrors. Walmart is notorious for leveraging and if you don’t see the impact they will have on our local business, then imagine selling your ware’s to an international company and not being able to make payroll because they are waiting an extra month to pay you while they send you back half the the inventory they purchased at a bargained discount anyway. They prey off of everyone and don’t give a poot about anyone except the shareholders.


Jean of Powhatan
Nov. 4, 2009, 05:23 PM

It really is hard for me to attempt to understand why Powhatan can’t work something out with WalMart.

Yes, there has to be an agreement for the store not to impose upon the environment but I do not think we have to worry as much about if it would destroy the “look” of the particular area it is to built in.  It looks pretty sad at that location and a WalMart with nice landscaping, lighting and architecture would be a much needed improvement.

Secondly, I often hear residents complaining about not having this or that in Powhatan…well business taxes in many communities and counties pay for the this and that.  Real estate taxes that are high and continue to climb higher in this county are a heavy burden on a family and that will continue to happen unless Powhatan embraces some type of business development to occur in Powhatan.  The stores here are great stores but they do not pay the business taxes that are needed to improve the quality of life in Powhatan especially for our children.

Thank you.


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