The Movement to Stop Dollar Stores From Suffocating Black Communities - Time to pass the buck to dollar stores

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Some say the stores — disproportionately found in low-income, rural, and Black areas — stifle economic growth and job creation, and exacerbate food insecurity.


For years, the Rev. Donald Perryman wondered why the formerly thriving Black downtown of Toledo, Ohio, couldn’t get a grocery store.

His suspicions were confirmed after a city study found in 2020 that the opening of new Dollar General stores drove other companies out of business, deterring potential grocers from investing there. He, along with a group of ministers, knew that in order to get a supermarket, they had to stop new chain dollar stores from plaguing their communities. They made great strides when the Toledo City Council passed a moratorium the same year that required new small-box retail stores to apply for a special-use permit.

The moratorium expired a year later, however — without the community’s knowledge — and a new Dollar General opened down the street from Perryman’s church on Dorr Street.

This month, the city proposed a $12 million project to construct a food incubation hub that would deliver fresh and healthy foods to local markets and low-income areas such as Dorr Street. Without renewed legislation, Perryman fears the threat of another dollar store could jeopardize the project, halting their years-long efforts.

Now, his coalition is pushing the city to ban these stores altogether.

The ongoing fight in Toledo represents one of many small-scale efforts nationwide to restrict Dollar General and Dollar Tree, which owns Family Dollar, the fastest-growing food retailers in the U.S. Some Black residents and elected officials argue the stores stifle economic growth and job creation, and exacerbate food insecurity. The stores are also disproportionately in areas that are low-income, rural, and Black, which experts say is racist.

“They’re like an invasive species. They overpower all the resources and make the businesses in those neighborhoods vulnerable. That’s where dollar stores can thrive,” Perryman, 70, said. “No matter what community, the cause of food deserts stem from one route, and that’s economic disinvestment in vulnerable communities.”

Dollar stores are not only concentrated in low-income Black neighborhoods, but in high-income Black communities as well.

An April study by the Brookings Institution found that wealthy Black neighborhoods in metro areas such as Dallas, Los Angeles, and New York, were less likely to be within 1 mile of a premium grocery store than wealthy neighborhoods with fewer Black residents.

Andre Perry, senior fellow at Brookings Metro and co-author of the report, said the lack of a grocery store signals to other investors and businesses that the area is not worth investing in, which leads to weaker tax bases and more dollar chain stores.

“How prevalent a problem this is that even your upper income Black neighborhoods aren’t getting the amenities that other upper income neighborhoods enjoy,” Perry said. “You’re almost left with saying, ‘Hey, if this community was not Black, you would see greater investment, and as a result, also better food access and quality in some cases.’ We shouldn’t have to recruit white people to get grocery stores.”

Ashanté Reese, assistant professor of African and African Diaspora Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, said this isn’t a money problem, but a racism problem, and the issue is even more dire in resource-strapped rural areas.

“We could put a whole bunch of reasons why stores say they locate where they do or where they don’t, but a large part of this truly has come down to racism and a lack of imagination,” Reese said. “The fact that our food system is largely driven by corporate chains is a problem because they are definitely profit driven in a way that doesn’t leave a lot of room to care about people.”

Dollar General and Dollar Tree operated more than 34,000 stores at the beginning of last year, more than McDonald’s, Starbucks, Target, and Walmart combined, according to research from the Institute for Local Self-Reliance. In the future, they plan to grow to more than 51,000 stores.

Over the years, dollar stores have expanded their food options, which tend to be mostly packaged, higher in calories, and lower in nutrients, a Tufts University study found. Researchers wrote that the dollar stores may be filling food voids where local grocers do not have enough businesses to support maintaining a store, leaving residents with fewer food options, especially in rural areas.

For more than a decade, dollar stores have been the fastest-growing food retailers by household expenditure share, with an increase of nearly 90% from 2008 to 2020 according to Tufts University. In rural areas, the increase was 103%.

In rural and low-income areas, people, on average, spend more than 5% of their food budget at dollar stores. In rural Black households, they spent nearly 12%. One reason: They are likely to be located further from grocery stores.

The limited healthy food offerings is a major criticism of the stores. It is why some Black leaders have been leading the charge to stop dollar stores from suffocating their communities.

Vanessa Hall-Harper, District 1 City Councilor for Tulsa, Oklahoma, paved the way for other cities when she passed the first ordinance curbing dollar stores in 2018. Whenever new construction or development broke ground in the city, Family Dollar or Dollar General stores popped up, and most times within miles of one another, she said. Her constituents in north Tulsa wondered why they had to travel outside their community to go grocery shopping.

Similar to Perryman, Hall-Harper conducted research, created an idea to limit the number of dollar stores, then presented it to the city’s legal team. Their response: It’s illegal, and the city would be sued. She then went to the mayor, who directed the team to assist her in creating a policy.

After months of meetings, in April 2018, they enacted a policy called the Healthy Neighborhoods Overlay, which amended the city’s zoning laws to permanently restrict the building of discount stores in the city’s underserved communities. It also provided incentives to promote businesses selling healthier food options.

The journey didn’t end there. Hall-Harper reached out to grocery stores — both small and large — to locate to the area. They all declined. She reached out to the Tulsa Economic Development Corp. to find funding to recruit someone to open a supermarket. Two years ago, the North Tulsa community secured its first grocer, Oasis Fresh Market, in more than a decade.

Despite pushback, she kept going and advised other leaders to do the same.

“It’s incumbent upon leaders to step up and not just go with the status quo because these dollar stores don’t proliferate white communities, they only do that for Black, brown, and poor communities where people are less likely to have a voice or have a leader that’s going to stand up and push back against big money,” Hall-Harper said. “There’s always those that profit and then there are those that are profited off of.”

Since then, at least 54 cities and towns have enacted laws that restrict new dollar stores. At least 75 communities have blocked proposed dollar stores, with the majority of those occurring between 2021 and 2022, according to the Institute for Local Self-Reliance report.

Through city ordinances, a few places have created temporary moratoriums on the opening of new dollar stores. At least 39 adopted permanent ordinances, which either require a store to open within 1 to 5 miles of an existing dollar store or set a limit on the number of dollar stores in a community. Only one community, in Stonecrest, Georgia, imposed a total ban on new dollar stores, the report said.

While there have been some efforts to stop the stores, advocates say some people enjoy shopping at dollar stores because of its cheaper prices.

In Baltimore, Democratic state Sen. Mary Washington heard from community members who frequented dollar stores, citing its convenience and good deals. They called others who didn’t like the offerings “bougie.”

While the products seem cheaper, many of the products are packaged in smaller quantities and cost more per unit size. One example: Old Spice deodorant. At Dollar Tree, a 0.8 ounce of Old Spice deodorant costs $1.25, but it’s less than one-third the size of the standard size. The same 0.8 ounce stick costs $1.08 or less at Target and Walmart, respectively. A 16-ounce carton of milk is about $8 a gallon, more than quality milk at Whole Foods.

“There are some people in the communities that feel like, ‘What do you got against dollar stores?’ … They provide quality things for poor people,’” Washington said. “When you explain … they sell canned goods that are very close to the expiration day, or they’re expanding their grocery section so now we can’t get a full service grocery store into the community … they get it.”

A spokesperson for Dollar Tree-Family Dollar told Civil Eats last year that they were aware of the concerns.

“We understand the concerns of many local officials regarding the changing nature of our shared communities across the country, and — as part of those communities — we are looking for ways to help our neighborhoods be healthier, safer, and more prosperous,” the statement said.

Dollar General spokeswoman Crystal Luce told Civil Eats that “a meaningful number of its [new] stores are expected to be in current food deserts to help address food insecurity across the country.”

For Perryman, he’s not giving up. He said Toledo is moving in the right direction with the $12 million project, but hopes the city will create a policy that disincentivizes dollar stores — if not an outright ban — and creates a healthy food overlay, reflective of Hall-Harper’s legislation in Tulsa.

“This [fight for a grocery store] is my baby. … After you have a baby, you can’t just have kids. You have to raise kids. You’ve got to protect them from the predators,” he said. “Let’s raise this investment now. We’ve got it. We’ve got to maintain it and protect it from these predator retailers.”
 
The journey didn’t end there. Hall-Harper reached out to grocery stores — both small and large — to locate to the area. They all declined. She reached out to the Tulsa Economic Development Corp. to find funding to recruit someone to open a supermarket. Two years ago, the North Tulsa community secured its first grocer, Oasis Fresh Market, in more than a decade.
My crystal ball tells me that in 2 years the headline will be "Local Grocery Store Oasis Fresh Market To Close
The company cites "profitably in difficult times"; locals say theft was high and the store was frequented by unhoused individuals"

Looking at the comments now, they seem to be a dollar store with overpriced brands and some produce that is hostile to any YTs that dare lighten it's door:

The store is fresh, new and clean which is just a step up of a corner store that price gouges big time [supply and demand] due to the lack of grocery stores in the area. I have never paid $7 for a small bag of "Generic Brand Sugar" in my life at a grocery store but I did today at Oasis Fresh Market and the only reason I didn't drive all the way to another grocery store to save $5 bucks for a small bag of sugar is convenience thus this is a "grocery convenience store" nothing more nothing less and thats the bottom line. After all the hype of good deals etc.. I hope the purchaser for this store does wiser purchasing to make prices more affordable without the price gouge for low income and families on a budget.

Seems to be the next failed north tulsa grocery store. Went in for the first time and noticed lots of bare spots in the refrigerator cases. I needed shredded lettuce which is a very basic item and they didn't have it. So back to warehouse market I go.
I don't get it. This is the solution to a food desert? There are only two brands for anything; the expensive one, and Best Choice garbage. It doesn't matter which you pick, either option is at least 15% over any other store in town. What are you guys doing with all the fresh fruit, meat, and veg that I saw there? There is no chance you are selling even a quarter of your inventory at those prices, so are you throwing it away?

Your food desert 'solution' is a performative, meaningless gesture. I'm sure you are claiming the losses on your tax, but you are not serving the people in your community. Lower your prices and diversify your stock to match the community you are in. If we wanted an entire shelf of giant-size Best Choice powdered coffee creamer, there's a dollar store on every block.
 
Gee, that’s funny, I live in a very rural area that’s almost entirely white, demographics-wise, and guess what retail chain has been popping up all over the place around here in recent years?

Same. I come from a place where black people just didn't exist. At all. And there were lots of Dollar Generals already and more popping up all the time when I left.

That said, I roll to disbelieve. I'll explain.

Dollar General doesn't really compete with any other store except maybe convenience stores like 7-11 and gas station markets, and possibly other "discount" stores like Dollar Tree. You can't really do your grocery shopping there - they don't have the selection. It's a place to run in when you want chips, or foil, or something. And they're not cheaper than a grocery store - actually they're often more expensive, despite their name. Oh, sure, some of their no-name brands are cheaper, but not by that much, and their name-brand stuff is often more expensive, they just obfuscate that by selling mostly small sizes.

Instead, I'll propose an alternate theory: They aren't driving other stores out of business, they're just the only stores that survive. Dollar General thrives when other stores don't because they don't give a shit and have minimal overheads. They usually have 1 employee at a time, maybe 2. The stores are the definition of no-frills, usually they're a fucking disaster zone inside. And their corporate behavior is toxic - they don't care if their employees get shot or their stores get robbed. Their overhead is low and they've managed to find a way to keep their margins solid. They're basically cockroaches. They pop up in filth and you can't kill them.
 
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I don't think it's a matter of Dollar General creating food deserts, I think it's food deserts attracting Dollar Generals. They're perfect for their predatory pricing practices.

But it is very much a class issue. Pretty much every small in the middle of fucking nowhere town I pass through on the back roads of Indiana/Illinois has a Dollar General/Family Dollar and nothing else. But Dollar Generals/Family Dollars are also located in larger towns typically down the street from supermarkets as well. All of these towns are white.

I guarantee that the reason big supermarkets are not going to black neighborhoods has everything to do with crime rate and nothing to do with a Dollar store being there. Maybe instead of getting rid of Dollar stores they should focus on getting rid of trap houses? But no, get rid of the only thing offering any food in these areas so you can bitch and moan even more in 5 years.
Can't wait until Whole Foods and Trader Joe's get called racist for not catering to those neighborhoods.
 
fucking dollar stores aren't even a buck anymore dammit they got shit in there what cost five smackers
Dollar stores have been like that for at least 20 years. Remember seeing stuff being sold for 20 dollars in Family Dollar as a kid. Dollar Tree was the only one that lived up to its name until recently.
 
The other edge of that razor is that if The Ghetto truly wanted superior goods then someone would be smart enough to start selling them those goods.

The hood don't want Kroger or Trader Joes, the Hood wants Smokes, Weed and Booze and Jordans. Once you spend all your money on that you aren't gonna have enough to buy real food.
Spend money on Jordans? Nah, the "peaceful protests" taught me these niggas want free Jordans that they can sell on Craigslist.
 
the fact that it is profitable to exploit poor (i.e. retarded) black people by selling them inferior goods is just an inconvenient truth.
Honestly, if they can't be bothered to divide the price by quanity or volume (which is essentially 4th to 6th grade math) they deserve to get scammed. A few years ago, I always thought that it was kind of weird how some of the major stores did the guesswork for you by listing the price per unit; turns out that it was another example of racism in math.
They usually have 1 employee at a time, maybe 2. The stores are the definition of no-frills, usually they're a fucking disaster zone inside.
I can't remember the brand name of it; but the last store that I went to had 2 or 3 employees working it, only one guy was at the register and the line was reaching half the length of the store, the shelves were half-filled with some really cheap shit.
 
“It’s incumbent upon leaders to step up and not just go with the status quo because these dollar stores don’t proliferate white communities, they only do that for Black, brown, and poor communities where people are less likely to have a voice or have a leader that’s going to stand up and push back against big money,” Hall-Harper said.

Has this dipshit ever set foot outside his hellhole city and seen what the white rural areas are getting? It's Walmarts and fucking Dollar Stores.

I could rant about this all day, because there is some really interesting history and urban ethnography behind the modern situation. Information and stories none of these "advocates" want to research, or once they do, they don't want to discuss it.

But the bottom line is "food deserts" didn't start out that way. They used to be served by all the small mom and pop stores he's romanticizing. They became deserts when those stores left before the dollar stores showed up.

You don't get the small businesses back by removing the replacements that came in decades after the business was already gone. This is cargo cult thinking at its worst.
 
Can't wait until Whole Foods and Trader Joe's get called racist for not catering to those neighborhoods.
I read an article a while back where Trader Joe's got accused of gentrification when they wanted to solve a food desert by hiring local contractors to build a store and local employees to run it. "Community leadership" rounded everyone up for a protest and Trader Joe's announced that they were going to listen to the concerns of the local community by promptly canceling their plans to build a store. HQ was probably glad they were warned ahead of time what a mess they were about to step into.
 
But the bottom line is "food deserts" didn't start out that way. They used to be served by all the small mom and pop stores he's romanticizing. They became deserts when those stores left before the dollar stores showed up.
and the real thing that kills mom and pop stores (besides niggers) is regulations

i'd have a shitty tienda on my porch if it wasn't for the fact that fifty five billion glowies would immediately climb up my ass and explode, can't sell shit in detroit
 
these dollar stores don’t proliferate white communities,
Every white person who reads this laughs.
they only do that for Black, brown, and poor communities
So, once again, we see the bullshit insuation that white people are never poor.

The other funny part is they put 'under served' as one word. Which turns it to looking like undeserved.

Which struck me as funny.

The Dollar Tree here is in a war with Dollar Tree and Family Dollar over who can be the shittiest store. All of them are no longer just buck.

The only thing they did was bring some new jobs to the area.

Everyone still goes to the local store, even though it's more expensive, because it's like 60 miles to WalMart, and that shit adds up.
 
Looking at the comments now, they seem to be a dollar store with overpriced brands and some produce that is hostile to any YTs that dare lighten it's door:

So I looked into this "Oasis Fresh Market".

  • They do have a website. If you go to it, the first thing you see, front and center, full page, is a picture of a black person. No real context, just, big ol' black person. You scroll down... It goes into talking about "our story", and black people's struggles, and such. Notably absent? Anything related to the fucking store. You know, like any normal grocery store's website, like Kroger or Walmart or anything.
  • They actually do have a storefront where you can browse their products online... It's hidden behind one of those unlabeled "3 horizontal bar" dropdowns in the upper left. Or if you scroll down the page about half way, there's a "shop with us" button that looks greyed out, but isn't. It's kinda buried in a bunch of "Our Story" crap. Although that one takes you to a "page not found" error, but it does take you to the store front, and you can go from there.
  • They really, really push the "Best Choice" brand. It's not like Kroger or Walmart or some other store, where they have a store brand, but it's clearly presented as a "you can also buy this, if you want to save some money". No, it's more of a "BUY THIS OR ELSE" vibe. In some cases, they just don't even seem to have a name brand option, although usually they do.
  • Best Choice, for the record, isn't a "store" brand. It's like IGA, Spartan, Food Club, or a few other imprints - it's sold to small independent grocers and tiny regional chains. They have nothing to do with it. Best Choice claims to be sold in "over 2,800" stores. I've never heard of it.
  • They have a fairly limited selection of any specific item. If you need "a thing", they probably have that thing. What they may not have is your prefered brand or specific variety, particularly if you don't happen to like best selling option. They basically seem to sell the best selling options and then nothing at all.
  • Their prices are not quite as ridiculous as some of the worst reviews claim. On some things they're high, on some things they aren't. I compared them against my local Kroger, using non-sale prices. Some random examples of what I would consider grocery basics (K- Kroger, O-Oasis): Green pepper: 0.79@K, 0.89@O. Gold Medal Unbleached AP Flour: 4.49@K, 5.29@O. Del Monte Canned Corn, 1.50@K, 1.79@O. Kellogs Corn Flakes, 18oz, 7.29@K, 6.99@O. 80/20 Ground Beef: 6.99@K, 3.09@O.
  • The real standout there is the ground beef... That's cheaper than my military family can get it on base. That's cheaper than the cheapest tube of ground beef at any other store. By modern beef prices, that price is simply insane. I'm very curious about that. Beyond that, their prices are not meaningfully better or worse than an average grocery store, as far as I can tell.
  • From looking at photos online, the store itself is... weird. I get a very weird vibe from it. It's just... somehow wrong. It doesn't look dirty or anything, it just looks... weird. The spacing of the shelves is strange, how they arrange things is strange, and the whole thing has a very cold, modern, sterile vibe to it that's just offputting. What it feels like is the sort of set for a "store" in a low-budget movie.
  • They don't seem to have any of the nicer trappings of a real grocery store - no fresh donuts, no hot lunch counter, no bulk goods, etc. It's a very no-frills sort of experience.
What it seems like to me is like the grocery store version of those Etsy stores that sell "hand made jewelry" that they buy by the case from China or India. It looks sleek and progressive, but they don't really do anything themself. It's just shipping product.
 
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These people are intentionally confusing cause and effect. I get that the dollar stores are the shopping equivalent to check cashing places. Niggers stealing anything that isn’t bolted down and behind plexiglass is only going to attract franchises willing to take a risk and that means high margin goods and since these places are poor, it means garbage sold at premium prices. There will never be a way around this.
 
The niggers drove all the real groceries and stores out over the years so all they deserve is dollar general but that also fucks artists like myself who used to live in the hood for cheap and unwatched real estate. Unfortunately, dollar general is a plight on small white communities far more as it shuts down the local ma and pa operations. It's like a small walmart but the food is fucking atrocious.

Learn to garden, learn to fish, learn to do basic sewing, learn to do woodworking. Learn to be self sufficient as best you can, bit coin won't be around when they start hitting those upper atmosphere EMP's.
 
if the US government was really concerned about increasing the amount of fresh produce consumed by black folks, it would criminalise its possession and supply whilst flooding black neighbourhoods with arugula, kale and quinoa. soon every boy on a corner can hook you up with that carambola
 
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