City & State

Chamber: Kirkwood chains OK to stay

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IDS | IDS File Photo

The Von Lee theater is renovated to a Noodles & Company in February 2007. The Von Lee, which was a local movie theater, was a staple on Kirkwood Avenue that closed and was bought out by the restaurant chain.

POSTED AT 12:36 AM ON Nov. 5, 2009 | PRINT | Email | SHARE | COMMENTS (8)

Panda Express, Chipotle, Noodles & Company and other downtown restaurant chains are safe – for now.

The Greater Bloomington Chamber of Commerce said Tuesday they would not restrict the number of chains or formula-based restaurants allowed on Kirkwood Avenue and the Courthouse Square.

This statement comes in response from a soon-to-be-proposed ordinance that Mayor Mark Kruzan formulated.

In Kruzan’s April 29 State of the City address, he discussed how protecting locally owned and operated businesses is at the top of his list.

“Local enterprises are what will get this country through the recession,” Kruzan said. “They are the cradle of entrepreneurial spirit. ... Our message is not that chain business are not welcome – they, after all, employ people and satisfy demand – but we want to encourage a climate that fosters local first.”

Following his address, Kruzan put together a group to work toward drafting an ordinance to limit the number of chains and formula-based restaurants in the downtown area, which could also be expanded to Fourth Street, said Morgan Hutton, director of advocacy for the Chamber of Commerce.

On Tuesday, however, the Chamber of Commerce stated that it does not support the possibility of the proposed ordinance.

“It is in the process of being brought forward,” Hutton said. “It probably won’t be (presented) until after the first of the year.

The group will meet for the second time on Dec. 8.

The Chamber of Commerce found several points of concern including proven history that chains do not compete against local business, according to a press release. The Chamber does not see a future threat to the look of the downtown area nor a reason that would justify new legislation.

Larry Webb, Cafe Pizzaria co-owner and co-manager, has watched businesses move
in and out of Kirkwood Avenue since he started managing in 1972.

“They haven’t affected anything as far as I know,” he said. “A hundred of them might.
The more that come has to affect someone, but one restaurant probably wouldn’t hurt us. They’ve come and gone over the years.”

The biggest effect chains have caused is parking issues downtown, Webb said.

“The whole problem down here is that we don’t have parking,” he said. “I worry about losing more parking than I do about chains.”

Likewise, Matt Beall, manager of the Laughing Planet Cafe, hasn’t felt the effect of
chain restaurants on local business.

Chipotle and Laughing Planet Cafe serve similar food but attract different audiences.

“Generally, I don’t think (chains) affect us all that much. We haven’t even noticed Chipotle,” Beall said. “We’re more local and in the community, more than just a name.”

However, fellow restaurateur David Webb, co-owner and co-manager of Cafe Pizzaria with his father Larry Webb, said that students go to chains more often.

“People only eat at chains because they are the ones who can advertise daily and offer deals,” he said.

The Chamber also found fault with the vague definition of the word “chain” or “formula-based” restaurant. Without a clear definition, chains like Noodles & Company or BuffaLouie’s could fall under the axe of the ordinance, too.

“We have a lot of local businesses that started here and that have expanded,” Hutton said. “If they have one location in Indianapolis, does that consider them a chain?”

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Posted by James Dean at 10:33 PM on Nov 05, 2009 | Report this comment

This has always been an issue that I have had with Bloomington. It is called pretentiousness. Many of these local businesses act as if you must fit into a certain image to shop there. A certain record shop once refused to order a CD for me because it did not belong to an indie label or not a local band. At least the people of the chain stores are willing to help you out and don't go all high school on you if you do something that does not fit their "image."

Posted by Thebe at 4:34 PM on Nov 05, 2009 | Report this comment

To "IDS reader": Get a grip. What can you contribute to the discussion at hand?

Posted by Thebe at 4:32 PM on Nov 05, 2009 | Report this comment

Though I am a strong and active support of local businesses, I disagree with the mayor's proposal. It's too sweeping. I don't want Bloomington to become like Nashville, Indiana. Limiting options is not good for visitors who want tried and true.

Posted by pranger at 12:38 PM on Nov 05, 2009 | Report this comment

To IDS reader, file photos are common practice at newspapers across the nation. I'm assuming that the photo was used to show construction. There isn't any commercial businesses going up on Kirkwood right now. At least not that I know of. So this was probably the best photo they could have gotten. Any other photo would have been just as lackluster.

Posted by Chris at 12:31 PM on Nov 05, 2009 | Report this comment

Don't read a free newspaper if you don't like what they publish "IDS" reader. Go out and buy a newspaper, then you can complain. When it's free, you take what you can get. Get over yourself. I would guess the City won't propose such an ordinance because of the legal ramifications. Chains have deep pockets and designated lawyers that can end up costing the city thousands of dollars in legal battles.

Posted by IDS reader at 11:3 AM on Nov 05, 2009 | Report this comment

Don't use old photos on the cover of a newspaper. Take new photos, or don't put the story on the front page. It's confusing and not newsworthy.

Posted by funny at 9:52 AM on Nov 05, 2009 | Report this comment

The the headline and lead of this article are misleading and poorly written. The headline implies that the chamber has definitive power to make a decision in this matter when they do not. The lead implies that existing chain stores would be forced to close when in fact the regulatory change in question would only effect future businesses moving in.

Posted by mandyAmanda at 1:10 AM on Nov 05, 2009 | Report this comment

Local is good, chains are good too. We should have both. Its absurd. A lot of the local businesses offer stuff that the chains don't do so I don't think those businesses should be threatened. If anything, opening up a successful chain might draw more people to downtown and into some of the local record shops or clothing shops. Also, David Webb says, "People only eat at chains because they are the ones who can advertise daily and offer deals." I'd say being able to "offer deals" is a good thing.


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