Lethbridge Herald

Sears Canada closing 59 stores Lethbridge’s Park Place store to remain open

- Linda Nguyen

Sears Canada will close 59 stores and cut approximat­ely 2,900 jobs under a court-supervised restructur­ing, the beleaguere­d retailer said Thursday following years of dwindling sales and a revolving door of top executives.

The announceme­nt came after the Ontario Superior Court of Justice granted the department store chain temporary protection from creditors under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangemen­t Act (CCAA).

Under the court-supervised plan, Sears Canada will close 20 full-line department stores, 15 Sears Home stores, 14 Sears Hometown locations and all 10 of its Sears Outlet stores. The closures include 13 locations in Alberta, including Medicine Hat, but Lethbridge’s department store at Park Place will remain open. Sears department stores range from 30,000 to 300,000 square feet, with many serving as shopping hubs in small towns throughout the country.

The company plans to continue operating throughout the restructur­ing and said it intends to emerge as a leaner, more focused operation better able to compete in the hyper-competitiv­e retail industry.

“However, to achieve that goal and to right-size its business, the Sears Canada Group anticipate­s that a number of stores will have to be closed, operating costs reduced, business lines exited, and head count reductions implemente­d,” Sears Canada said in documents filed with the court.

The 30-day court protection from creditors will give it some “breathing space” as it tries to revamp its business, the retailer said. The court also authorized Sears Canada to obtain up to $450 million in financing to maintain operations.

About 500 office positions will be eliminated immediatel­y, with the rest of the job losses coming as the stores begin to close. As of May 30, Sears Canada employed approximat­ely 17,000 people, with 10,500 in part-time positions and the rest working full-time.

The move, which retail experts had been anticipati­ng for some time, marks a culminatio­n of struggles for a company with roots in Canada that stretch back generation­s.

Sears Canada has piled up losses and seen its stock nosedive, losing more than 80 per cent of its value in the last year, despite efforts to refashion itself at a time when more Canadians are shirking bricksand-mortar in favour of online shopping. It has also gone through several leadership changes in recent years.

Mark Cohen, who was the company’s CEO and chairman before he was ousted in 2004, said its problems have been selfinflic­ted and he believes it has no vision for the future.

“This notion that they’ll come out a stronger, better company is a fantasy because they don’t have a stronger, better strategy,” said Cohen, who is currently the director of retail studies at Columbia University Graduate School of Business in New York.

“You clean up your balance sheet, but then what?”

Branding and marketing strategist Tony Chapman said one of the biggest issues Sears Canada has was that it had difficulty adapting to changing consumer tastes while competitor­s such as Walmart, Costco and Amazon marched onto their terrain. “They lost touch,” Chapman said. “It was inevitable that a low-cost producer like an Amazon or Walmart is going to eat your lunch and that’s what happened.”

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