The Guardian (Charlottetown)

City shopper gets message

- BY J.A. THOMPSON GUEST OPINION J.A. Thompson is a Charlottet­own shopper who feels unwanted in the downtown

Open letter to downtown (Charlottet­own) merchants:

I got the message . . . really. I’m referring to my attempt at Christmas shopping downtown last week.

I thought it was time to get started on my shopping so I headed downtown one day after lunch. I pulled in a parking space and discovered I didn’t have change for the meter.

I went into the closest store to ask for change and the nice lady gave me a parking token. I went back out to find a meter attendant putting a ticket on my windshield. I offered her the token but she said, “too late.” From the time I got out of the vehicle to the time I was back with the token was hardly two or three minutes. Talk about efficiency.

At that point, I had lost my interest in shopping so I went to pay my fine. The lady at the police station, while polite, was unsympathe­tic. Going into a store to get change or a token doesn’t count.

Once the meter attendant is on the scene it’s too late. She said that if I want to shop downtown I need to come prepared.

I then realized that I was being selfish. Everything is not about what I want. I hadn’t been taking into considerat­ion what you want. Apparently, you don’t want the likes of me coming downtown waving cash and credit cards about — it seems that you just want to be left alone. I now realize that my interest in your wares is both unwanted and unapprecia­ted.

I had someone tell me that you merchants don’t control the parking policy but I can’t see how that’s true — the policy is set by city council whom you elect and your tax dollars pay for parking enforcemen­t. Why would you be paying to have someone chase away customers if you didn’t want them to?

And your strategy seems to be working.

On a weekday afternoon, three weeks before Christmas, there were lots of available parking spaces and the store I went into only had one other customer at the time.

I understand now that I went downtown where I wasn’t wanted. I’m sorry. I got the message. It won’t happen again.

From now on I’ll shop uptown and on Amazon.

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