The Cairns Post

Smaller retailers fear Woolies plan

Giant centre threat to business

- CHRIS CALCINO chris.calcino@news.com.au

TRINITY Beach retailers fear they will become casualties of the supermarke­t war unless Cairns Regional Council imposes a ceasefire.

Woolworths is pushing ahead with its aggressive national expansion plans. Public submission­s are now closed on its proposal to build a 4350sq m shopping centre at the corner of Trinity Beach Rd and the Captain Cook Highway.

Trinity Beach News owner Bruce Sharples collected 570 objections to the project over a week and lodged them with the council.

“The locals give us good support and I think we’d still get good support, but ultimately we would lose some customers,” he said. “The way retail is at the moment, we’re not in a position to lose any.”

Developers are in a race to build another major retail complex north of the city. Townsville-based Trinity Park Investment­s chopped down a palm tree plantation at Smithfield last week to make way for a new shopping centre.

Its owners Sam and Paul Pellegrino have won a fiveyear legal battle with nearby Smithfield Shopping Centre owner, Dexus, and plan to sell the property and its project approvals to a developer to build.

Mr Sharples doubted whether the population could sustain two new centres and quietly hoped the Smithfield venture would scare off Woolworths.

“I’m hoping some common sense prevails in the council,” he said.

Unlike some other vendors in the Coastwatch­ers Shopping Centre complex, Mr Sharples said he was not considerin­g a change of tenancy to the new developmen­t.

He has owned the business in its current position for the past nine years.

“We have a more personalis­ed service – we know our customers very well,” he said.

“That puts us in a position to give customers much better service than they get at Woolies. “I think they’ll miss that.” Trinity Beach Quality Meats owner Brett Harland said nobody in the Coastwatch­ers centre supported Woolworths’ plan, even if they ultimately became the supermarke­t giant’s lessees.

“I hope it doesn’t go forward, but if it does I don’t think we’ve got any other option,” he said. “It’s going to hurt us. “It will be hard for a small supermarke­t to survive in here, which is sort of a drawcard to this shopping centre.”

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 ?? Picture: STEWART McLEAN ?? APPREHENSI­VE: Trinity Beach Quality Meats’ Brett Harland and Bruce Sharples from Trinity Beach News agency are unhappy with Woolies’ proposal.
Picture: STEWART McLEAN APPREHENSI­VE: Trinity Beach Quality Meats’ Brett Harland and Bruce Sharples from Trinity Beach News agency are unhappy with Woolies’ proposal.

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