The arrival of national chain stores often drives-up commercial rents,
forcing out small, locally owned businesses that serve the everyday
needs of the surrounding neighborhood. This typically occurs when a
shopping area becomes a destination for tourists or others who live
outside of the immediate area. Neighbors may find their local hardware
store or grocery replaced by chain restaurants, apparel stores, and
other businesses that can afford to pay higher rents. Enacting a
neighborhood serving zoning law can prevent this by requiring that new
retail stores demonstrate that a majority of their sales will be
derived from the surrounding neighborhood.
Rules
Hometown Advantage Bulletin
Featured Resources
Big-Box & Wal-Mart Impacts
Our extensive collection of resources — fact sheets, studies, graphs and more — on the impact of big-box retailers.
Rebuilding Local Business
Strategies to strengthen independent businesses — from buy-local campaigns to innovative financing initiatives.
"A devastating critique of the impact of big retailers on American life."
- The Guardian
See more reviews.
Order from your local bookstore.
A New Deal for Local Economies — Speech by Stacy Mitchell
Changing the Rules: Policy Guide
"Rules" are laws, ordinances, and other public policies. Use the menus below to navigate our policy tools and models.


List of popular RSS feeds
Comments
Post new comment