Santa Fe New Mexican

Canadian ‘buy local’ effort fights Amazon on its own turf

‘Not Amazon’ website features thousands of small businesses to boost local economy

- By Geneva Abdul

TORONTO — The snow was falling outside Ali Haberstroh’s apartment in late November when the idea came to her.

At the time, Canada was nearing a second lockdown to curb rising coronaviru­s cases. In anticipati­on, the owner of a vintage clothing store in Toronto who is a friend of Haberstroh’s had put together a list of other local vintage shops offering curbside pickup and deliveries in lieu of being able to open their doors.

“It was a wake-up call,” Haberstroh, 27, said of the list, which reminded her how enormous retailers like Walmart, Costco and Amazon had thrived during the pandemic while many smaller, local businesses had been shut. “I thought if there is one tiny thing I can do to help, then I should get on it.”

Inspired to build a more comprehens­ive list, Haberstroh promptly created an Instagram post, tagging independen­t businesses and shopkeeper­s across Toronto. Included was a new website, Not-Amazon.ca — a URL that she had bought for $2.99.

Introduced as a local list to help keep small businesses alive, Not Amazon was created “so you don’t have to give any money to Amazon this year!” the post read.

What began as a Google spreadshee­t with more than 160 businesses collated initially from Haberstroh’s memory and research became a directory of hundreds that have a website and offer nationwide shipping, curbside pickup or delivery.

So far, the website has garnered more than half a million page views and grown to include 4,000 businesses across Toronto,

Calgary, Halifax and Vancouver. The site is now submission-based and thousands of businesses are awaiting Haberstroh’s approval.

“In a big city like Toronto, where it feels like most businesses are local, I think it’s so easy to think these things will be here forever,” said Haberstroh, who works as a social media manager at a marketing firm and plans to expand Not Amazon to even more cities. “You don’t think that they’re going to go anywhere.”

Small and medium-size businesses contribute more than 50 percent to Canada’s gross domestic product. But since the pandemic lockdowns, 40 percent of small businesses have reported layoffs while 20 percent have deferred rent payments, according to government data.

At the same time, Amazon and big-box retailers with more robust e-commerce platforms have far outpaced small competitor­s, turning online shopping from a convenienc­e into a necessity for consumers worldwide.

Haberstroh’s attempt to even the playing field has been welcomed by small-business owners like Tannis and Mara Bundi, twin sisters who opened the Green Jar in Toronto last December. The store specialize­s in bulk items, like soap and honey, that customers buy to refill their own containers, reducing single-use plastics and household waste.

When the pandemic took hold in March, the sisters swiftly focused on their online operations and offered pickup and delivery, but even as restrictio­ns eased, business remained touch and go. Since being on the Not Amazon site, the Green Jar has seen online orders rise 500 percent and has been “incredibly busy,” Tannis Bundi said.

“This type of initiative really gave an opportunit­y for small businesses to be seen and appreciate­d,” she said. “Large corporatio­ns, like Amazon, they’re making millions and millions of dollars, and there’s a disconnect

“This type of initiative really gave an opportunit­y for small businesses to be seen and appreciate­d.” Tannis Bundi, owner of the Green Jar in Toronto

and a detachment. As a small business I have a much smaller carbon footprint, I have a vested interest in my community, and I’m more likely to invest back into my community through charity and hiring locally.”

Amazon declined to comment for this article.

Local campaigns by independen­t sellers have also popped up in the United States, with bookstores in particular fearing that they won’t survive the pandemic. In France, there was a nationwide backlash against Amazon and other big retailers as “nonessenti­al” businesses closed in November. In August, Canada’s competitio­n watchdog started an investigat­ion into the company’s business practices.

While there have been some shifts in consumer behavior, Daniel Kelly, president and CEO of the Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business, estimated that 1 in 7 Canadian businesses, or 225,000, will close because of the pandemic.

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