Arrested Development
By Jonmaesha Beltran / ecoRI News staff
| The former supermarket was once an A&P store before Stop & Shop acquired it. The property has sat vacant since 2005, when its only tenant, Cycling Brothers Motor Sports, shut its doors. (Jonmaesha Beltran/ecoRI News) |
Julie Harney grew up within the same 41 square miles where she first watched airplanes lift off, developed a passion for horses and now raises her own children.
The 45-year-old, who spends her days answering questions
that help develop new medicines, has had one question linger in her mind for
most of her adulthood: how do you fill the vacancies in Chariho Plaza?
The Richmond shopping center has struggled to retain tenants as businesses closed and others outgrew their space, while its ownership changed hands over the years.
Four vacancies remain: a boarded-up gas station, two former
retail storefronts and an empty supermarket building. But none has drawn more
attention in the town of 8,000 than the vacant grocery store that Stop &
Shop has held on to for three decades.
Grocery chains are known to engage in anti-competitive
behavior by implementing restrictions in deeds and leases that prohibit the
sale of groceries in certain properties to limit nearby competition. The
practice deepens barriers to access to healthy foods and has left buildings and
lots vacant for decades in rural and urban communities.
Researchers have also found another tactic: vacating a
property yet continuing to pay the rent.
“It appears that Ahold/Stop & Shop will employ virtually
any means available to stifle competition,” University of Connecticut Professor
Ronald Cotterill wrote in a 2002 research paper.
Lt. Gov. Sabina Matos’ staff have searched for restrictive
covenants across the state, and some of their findings include examples where
Stop & Shop has left commercial property frozen: a demolished Almacs plaza
in Coventry and the building in Richmond.
While property records show the company owns the land in
Coventry through a subsidiary, it leases a parcel in Richmond while retaining
ownership of the building on top of it.
Matos has pushed to outlaw restrictive covenants in the grocery
sector in Rhode Island, and congressional leaders have called on the Federal Trade Commission to investigate
their use as antitrust violations.
As residents watch how those efforts will affect areas where a restrictive covenant doesn’t exist, Richmond residents are looking for ways to bring new life to Chariho Plaza.
“It’s really disappointing that nothing yet has taken hold
to create something better in that location,” Harney said.



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