Solutions to cart problem can be found
There is no doubt that stray shopping carts are a nuisance in
Costa Mesa. Sitting abandoned on street corners and in bushes, they
are a blight on the landscape and a sign of ill care and disrespect
for the city.
The abandoned carts long have been a problem. Now, Costa Mesa
officials rightly are working on a serious solution.
As proposed, that solution would be a law requiring stores to
ensure that shopping carts remain on the stores’ properties. If not,
the consequences would be swift and fair: If more than five carts
from a single store are found in a year, the store would have to
install a containment system or help the city pay for a
cart-retrieval service. Stores on the East Coast have tackled this
problem, for instance, by building physical barriers that keep carts
by the front doors. To escape with one, a person would have to lift
the cart three or four feet into the air, certainly a deterrent for
the vast majority of people.
Yes, those barriers do mean carrying bags to cars or driving the
cars up to the doors. But the little bit of inconvenience is
well-worth enjoying a city free of the visual blight stray carts
cause.
Unfortunately, the early discussions about the law are missing,
for the most part, a key player: the owners and representatives of
the stores. At a recent meeting to discuss the idea, just five of 34
retailer representatives elected to attend, even though they will be
the most affected by this law. Representatives from Albertsons,
Stater Brothers, Grower’s Direct, Trader Joe’s and Target have all
been working with the city and deserve praise.
City officials now are planning to send out a mass mailing to
store owners with details of the proposed law. This time around,
every store in town that could be part of the problem, and therefore
part of the solution, should respond.
If they do not, they will deserve little sympathy when the law is
in place and they are punished for violating it.
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