Co-op closure desperately sad
14th January 2008
Dear Editor.
It is desperately sad to hear that the non food side of Co-op
department
stores in Castle House and Middlewood Road Hillsborough ("End
in Store
for the Co-Op" The Star January 11th 2008) are to close along
with the loss of 130 jobs. It is however unbelievable that the
chief executive of the Chamber of Commerce, the Council's cabinet
member for economic regeneration and the Hillsborough member of
parliament are saying they did not see this coming. It is their
economic policies that have got us in the mess.
On Monday 7th January the Planning Board gave the go ahead to
a
massive Tesco mega store with 865 car park spaces just off the
Wicker. The millions spent on the northern inner relief road have
been a publicly funded gift to this retail giant. The effect of
the store on Sheffield will be
similar to the effect that Meadowhall had on City Centre shops.
queezed between the Tesco megastore and the swanky New Retail
Quarter, businesses like the Co-op and the Markets will be unable
to compete and will fold. The people who have moved into the city
centre because they wish to live and work within the city will
have lost out. Land prices and rents will be pushed up and people
forced out. The vitality and
distinctiveness of what remains of a human scaled city centre
will be
further damaged.
What a pity that the loss of employment, damage to the local economy,
the social costs falling on the most vulnerable, the rising health
cost
of air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, and loss of our
heritage
were not properly taken into account by the politicians at that
important planning Board. LibDem and Labour councillors who last
year
stopped a new Tesco Store on Commonside, in Broomhill said that
the Saville Street Supermarket needed this huge car park in order
to ensure this 24 hour seven-day-a-week business investment thrived.
Supermarket chains and developers have become very powerful operators
in the city and our lives. Sheffield is rapidly becoming a "Clone
City"
with the wealth spent in local shops draining away from our communities.
Just where will it stop if the politicians we put into power cannot
stand up to these faceless monopolies and say no?
The Green Party will continue to support and protect a local economy,
thriving communities and the environment. We say "No"
to Sheffield becoming a clone city and challenge the Co-op to
reconsider its support for New Labour.
Yours Sincerely.
Green Party Councillor for Central Ward Bernard Little.
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