Los Angeles Times

Sears was ticket to middle class

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Re “It held the things they wanted,” April 3

I cried reading about the impending closure of the Sears store in Boyle Heights. So much of my family’s history revolves around that Sears.

My family arrived in Los Angeles from Mexico in 1956. Our father was hired by Sears to unload merchandis­e from trucks for six weeks only. Those six weeks turned into a 30-year career, during which he was sent to help open the first Sears store in Europe.

My dad’s hard work, his becoming bilingual, and his being so simpático enabled him to provide us with a middle-class life. He was forever grateful for the opportunit­ies Sears gave him — and yes, everything we bought was from Sears. Carmen Escamilla

Laguna Beach

For decades Boyle Heights was the home of the second-largest Jewish immigrant population in Los Angeles. In 1928, the graduating class of Roosevelt High School was almost entirely Jewish. And where did this group shop? Sears.

As a second-generation American Jew, I grew up in Boyle Heights in the 1940s, and Sears was where we went to buy clothes for the kids, tools for my father and a washing machine for my mother. And when we were away, I always knew when we were close to home when I saw that big blue sign.

Let’s hope the building stays intact. Richard Posell

Los Angeles

The majestic and again-endangered Sears structure in Boyle Heights is the architectu­ral twin of Sears Crosstown in my hometown of Memphis; both opened in 1927. The Memphis building also endured decades of deteriorat­ion before being restored as Crosstown Concourse, a mixed-use facility that now includes a high school.

Upon arrival by car in Los Angeles in 1970, you can imagine my surprise at seeing such a familiar and distinctiv­e tower near downtown. A wrong turn onto Alameda Street in search of the Hollywood Freeway provided the view.

I’m ashamed to say that I never entered the Boyle Heights building. Cay Sehnert

Eagle Rock

Your article states, “Developer Izek Shomof, who purchased the property in 2013, plans to turn it into residentia­l lofts, a trendy food hall and creative office spaces with a rooftop recreation area, but the COVID-19 pandemic has slowed progress.”

Evidently, this redevelopm­ent may not be the cash cow that Shomof had envisioned. Why doesn’t he sell or even donate this iconic property to the city?

Repurpose the landmark and turn it into a homeless shelter. Floors can be used to segregate people into safe groups with specific needs, such as single parents with kids or LGBTQ people. Offices can be transforme­d into on-site social services and child care. Include a full commissary and kitchen that can provide nourishmen­t, jobs and job training. Mike Hayashi Ladera Heights

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