Society & Culture1 min ago
Charity Shops
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What benefits or concessions, if any, do charity shops get which ordinary high-street businesses don't get ? Do these benefits vary depending which towns/cities they operate in ?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.hc4361, There is a very small Morrisons supermarket in the town center and a large Tesco Extra a mile and a half outside the town center, too far away for a lot of the elderly people who like to shop in a town center.
The Morrisons often runs out of even the basic items and is too small to stock the full range you normally expect.
The Morrisons often runs out of even the basic items and is too small to stock the full range you normally expect.
It's not just the councils, Mamya. Landlords now have to pay 100% business rates on empty properties so prefer to pass the burden of that on to the charity shops even if it means they are getting much less rent than they expected, or none in some cases. Very often there is a clause that the charity will vacate if a full paying tenant is found.
Eddie, a lot of people will be buying their meat, fish and veg from the Tesco superstore. Free convenient parking, a safe, warm and dry shopping environment with sparkling clean toilets. My Tesco superstore has a bus stop in the car park and the little ring and ride buses seem to be arriving and leaving in a continual loop full of pensioners and the less able. That's what has caused the decline of high shop grocery shopping.