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Mullins, S.C. Wal-Mart Cuts Back Hours, Goes Dark At Midnight
The night sky will soon be returning to Mullins, South Carolina. Actually,
the stars might not be visible, but the lights should be turned down lower
at midnight, now that Wal-Mart has announced that superstore #1869 will
close from midnight to 6 am. The decision takes effect on March 13th, and
Wal-Mart’s website still lists the store at 305 Commerce Drive in Mullins
as open 24 hours. According to a company spokesperson, the overnight shift
of workers will be absorbed into the store’s other shifts during its new
operating hours. No one will lose their job, but store Manager Willie
Holland refused o answer any questions from South Carolina News about the
why the hours were cutback as his supercenter. A sign posted on the doors
to the store tell customers that the new hours will change in mid-March.
In October of 2007, the Mullins store was reopened as a superstore. The
location for 15 years had been a Wal-Mart discount store with few
grcoeries. When Wal-Mart expanded the store, it said 100 jobs were added,
making the grand total 250 jobs. The superstore opened on October 24,
2007. In announcing the new store, Wal-Mart said: “After more than 15
years of serving the community as a discount store, residents will now
find groceries, general merchandise and time-saving services in one
convenient location. Located at 305 Commerce Drive, the new store was
painted in a color palette complementary to the area. “This is an exciting
time for our associates,” said Store Manager Jason Eudy, who is no longer
the store manager. “We’ve all been working hard to prepare the store for
opening and are looking forward to serving our customers in Marion County
with the conveniences, savings, selection and services that a Supercenter
provides.” The 153,430-square-foot Supercenter features a full line of
groceries including bakery goods, frozen foods, meat and dairy products,
fresh produce and a variety of organic offerings. Additional store
features include a Tire & Lube Express, a family fun center, a one-hour
photo lab, pharmacy and a Wal-Mart Connect Center for wireless phone
sales. Leased areas and services include a SmartStyle Family Hair Salon, a
branch of Woodforest National Bank and a Subway restaurant. “The store
will be open to customers 24 hours a day, seven days a week,” Wal-Mart
boasted. Now, less than a year and a half later, Wal-Mart is shutting down
its overnight hours. There is only one reason why Wal-Mart would close
down at night: business has not been as robust as the company expected.
But corporate headquarters is not about to shed any light on why this
Wal-Mart went dark.
In some communities, Wal-Mart has had to fight local residents to remain
open all night, especially when residential property abuts the site.
Wal-Mart superstores at night look like a concrete space ship with its
engines on a low hum. Despite the rhetoric from lighting engineers that
the light from the enormous poles are “directed downward,” and little
light “spills” over the property line, these huge buildings glow for
miles. Such a mammoth project is incompatible with residential quality of
life---especially if the store is open for business all night. These
stores also become a magnet for crime, because very little else is open
all night in some of these communities. Mullins is a very small city with
roughly 5,000 people. Its population has fallen since 1990, when it stood
at 5,900 people. The entire population of surrounding Marion County is
only 35,466. The introduction of tobacco in 1894 rocketed Mullins into the
“Tobacco Capital” of South Carolina. As many as 200 tobacco barns sprang
up throughout the community. Warehouses were also constructed and the
first tobacco sale took place on August 28, 1895. The city is still best
known for its tobacco market—and the fact that its one hour from the
Myrtle Beach area. This is the same city that made headlines in May of
2004 when Mullins attempted to rebuild its manufacturing base by making a
novel jobs pitch to Wal-Mart. Mullins town officials and Marion County
residents asked the world’s largest retailer in an open letter to become
their “partner in prosperity” and “help bring jobs back to America” by
agreeing to buy T-shirts “at a fair price” from a shuttered sewing plant
that they hope to reopen. Several state and local lawmakers and about
4,700 residents who live in and around Mullins signed the letter, which
was published in a full-page advertisement in the newspaper.
Sprawl-Busters reported on November 11, 2004, that Wal-Mart had spurned
the deal. Sam Walton boasted about his “Bring It Home To the USA” Program,
which he started in 1985 “in response to the soaring U.S. trade deficit.”
He said that buying American products was not going to be “some blind
patriotic idea”, because Wal-Mart would “only buy American if those goods
can be produced efficiently enough to offer good value.” Sam said if his
buyers “can get within 5% of the same price and quality, we take a smaller
markup and go with the American product.” The company announced in
November of 2004 that they had decided not to ink a contract with a Marion
County, South Carolina textile mill to produce a U.S. t-shirt called,
ironically, ProsperiTEES. The Anvil Knitwear plant, which shut down in
2002 and cost 600 people their jobs, made a pitch to Wal-Mart for a 5 year
contract to produce t- shirts. Wal-Mart told city officials it “had
several people look at it, but they could not make it work financially.”
Wal-Mart said the deal would mean higher prices for its customers. Anvil
workers even went to Bentonville, Arkansas to present their plan to
Wal-Mart, which they hoped would restore 350 jobs. They told Wal-Mart the
company could gain back some goodwill lost in a courtroom battle over a
proposed Wal-Mart supercenter being fought by neighboring Florence, S.C.
residents. Anvil’s research said that Wal-Mart shoppers would pay more for
a t-shirt made in the U.S. They said the Anvil t-shirt would cost 75 cents
more than a shirt made outside of America. A town attorney involved in the
deal told the press that Wal-Mart “gave absolutely no credence to the
validity of our ‘buy American’ research.” Wal-Mart explained that its
research indicated that customers would not be willing to pay more for
products made in the U.S. “While most of our customers would probably
agree with this philosophically, they just aren’t willing to pay more for
domestically made merchandise,” Wal-Mart said. Town officials were
disappointed by Wal-Mart’s decision, but the Mayor said, “The people who
worked at Anvil want to go back. I am sad about them. But we will keep
plugging along.” That was a little over four years ago, but some people
still harbor ill will about the retailer that would not Buy American.
Readers are urged to email the current Mullins Mayor Pam Lee at
with the following message: “Dear Mayor Lee,
Great news about Wal-Mart shutting down at night. That should be a big
relief to your police department, who won’t have to paying as many calls
to the building over night---and it certainly is appreciated by anyone
living near the store. After the way Wal-Mart treated Mullins and Anvil
workers back in 2004, its amazing you let the company expand in your city
at all. Take advantage of Wal-Mart’s closure at midnight, and adopt an
ordinance that requires all retailers over 40,000 s.f. to shut down at
midnight. Don’t give Wal-Mart the chance to open again overnight. They’ve
done nothing for Marion County---except rob you of manufacturing jobs they
outsourced to China. For that, they deserve to have their lights turned
out.”
Posted by Al Norman on Thursday, February 26, 2009
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ABOUT AL NORMAN
Al Norman stopped Wal-Mart from locating in his hometown of Greenfield, Massachusetts om 1993 and his fight continues today.
Named "enemy no. 1" by Fortune Magazine, Al runs Sprawl-Busters, and has traveled throughout the U.S. helping dozens of local coalitions.





