Politics & Government
Commissioner Lorraine Cochran-Johnson Featured In New York Times Story
The article details how communities across the U.S., including DeKalb County, have addressed the proliferation of small box discount stores.
Press release from DeKalb County:
March 2, 2023
DeKalb County Super District 7 Commissioner Lorraine Cochran-Johnson is featured today in a New York Times article detailing how communities across the United States, including DeKalb County, have addressed the proliferation of small box discount retail stores (SBDRS) in their neighborhoods.
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Commissioner Cochran-Johnson has become a credible and desired authority on ways to address the rapid growth of dollar stores and similar business models, due in large part to legislation authored and introduced by her in February 2019, which led to an enacted moratorium that same December halting the issuance of new business licenses to SBDRS.
Since that time, Commissioner Cochran-Johnson has been cited or interviewed in over 20 articles and news stories featuring similar coverage surrounding the efforts of local municipalities to curb the development of dollar stores in their jurisdiction.
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βIt was an honor to be interviewed for the New York Times,β said Commissioner Cochran-Johnson. βI am happy to see the proliferation of dollar stores receive national attention and communities address the adverse effect of these stores.β
In December 2022, after almost three years of discussions and research spurred by the moratorium requested by Commissioner Cochran-Johnson, the DeKalb County Board of Commissioners unanimously passed comprehensive text amendments to the DeKalb Zoning Ordinance to set distance requirements with the intent to diminish crime and mitigate negative consequences linked to SBDRS.
According to a report by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, a national research and advocacy organization that is critical of corporate control and its effects on community power, close to 75 communities have voted down planned dollar stores, while approximately 50, like DeKalb County, have enacted moratoriums or other limitations on their development.
βI am proud to see DeKalb County receive national attention as a progressive thinker on the forefront of developing legislation that creates the best outcome for communities when faced with known consequences of adverse development,β said Commissioner Cochran-Johnson. βI also want it to be known that I am a dollar store shopper. My only concern is ensuring retailers of any type do not have a harmful effect on our communities.β
This press release was produced by DeKalb County. The views expressed here are the author's own.