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Smart Growth as Shakedown

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The Washington Post reports [2] that Montgomery County (in Maryland, just outside Washington DC) has imposed tougher zoning restrictions on big-box retailers:

Montgomery County yesterday joined a growing list of
jurisdictions around the country that have imposed tougher zoning
restrictions on big-box retailers, marking a victory for unions and
Giant Food LLC, which joined forces to lobby for the restrictions.

The council voted, 7 to 0, to adopt zoning rules that
allow retailers to open so-called "combination retail stores" —
discount stores of at least 120,000 square feet with a full-service
grocery and pharmacy — only in specific commercial zones and then,
only with a special permit.

So this is pretty straightforward—a unanimous vote to make it harder for competitors to serve customers.

The zoning rules essentially subject some big-box
stores to an additional layer of review by county officials and provide
another opportunity for public input.

While the amendment passed yesterday does not name
specific retailers, in practice, it would affect only Wal-Mart
Supercenters, SuperTargets, and the supermarket chain Wegmans.

The County Executive, Douglas Duncan, pushed the bill and announced its success as a triumph for smart growth:

"Montgomery County today took another step forward in
its long fight to reduce sprawl and encourage smart growth
development," Duncan said in a prepared statement.

Duncan lobbied members to vote for his proposal, his
spokesman, David Weaver, said. He had help from Giant Food, which sent
letters to the council supporting the proposed restrictions. Officials
of United Food and Commercial Workers Local 400, meanwhile, organized
labor, education and women’s rights advocates to testify with them in
front of the council in October.

Costco Wholesale Corp. hired prominent local land-use
attorneys who successfully argued that it should be exempted from the
restrictions. Home Depot Inc. organized a last-minute e-mail campaign
by its store managers urging council members to exempt home-improvement
stores. They are exempt because they don’t have grocery stores.

So basically, this regulation protects Giant Food, a mediocre chain that fears the encroachment of the extraordinary Wegman’s, from serious competition.  That means higher prices and less selection for shoppers. 

I love that earlier reference to women’s rights advocates favoring the restriction.  Who knew that women, especially poor women, needed to be protected from shopping at large, low-price grocery stores?

I also like how the Council didn’t ban big-box groceries outright.  That leaves open the door for special begging, pleading and lobbying.  It really highlights what smart growth is  about—legislator as gate-keeper.  If you’d like in, love me enough or pay me enough and I’ll consider it.  Maybe.  It’s an outrageous way to run a jurisdiction in a democracy.  It makes property use and property rights subject to the whim of legislators.  What a sad day for the rule of law.

My general take on the big box phenomenon is here [3].

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