The Boston Globe

Target, citing crime, to close 9 stores

- By Anne D’Innocenzio

NEW YORK — Target will close nine stores in four states, including one in East Harlem, N.Y., and three in San Francisco, saying that theft and organized retail crime have threatened the safety of its workers and customers.

The closings, which will be effective Oct. 21, also include three stores in Portland, Ore., and two in Seattle. Target said that it still will have a combined 150 stores open in the markets where the closures are taking place. Target will offer affected workers the opportunit­y to transfer to other stores.

Target described the decision as “difficult.”

“We know that our stores serve an important role in their communitie­s, but we can only be successful if the working and shopping environmen­t is safe for all,” Target said in a statement on Tuesday.

Before making the decision, Target said it had invested heavily in strategies to prevent and stop theft such as adding more security team workers, using third-party guard services, and installing theft deterrent tools like locking up merchandis­e. It also has trained store leaders and security team members to protect themselves and de-escalate potential safety issues. But it noted that despite those efforts, it continued to face “fundamenta­l challenges” to operate the stores safely — and the business performanc­e at these locations was unsustaina­ble.

While the store closings account for just a fraction of the 1,900 stores Target operates nationwide, the move is significan­t. It underscore­s the big challenges that retailers like Target face in reducing theft in stores as they wrestle with protecting their workers and customers while trying to serve the community, particular­ly low-income and minority groups who rely on the local stores for necessitie­s.

For example, the Target store in East Harlem is located in a heavily Hispanic area, and residents have few choices to buy good quality healthy foods. In San Francisco, one of the stores slated to close is located at 13th Street and Folsom under a busy overpass with homeless tents in a largely commercial neighborho­od with auto shops. In Seattle, one of the stores is located on a busy avenue near the University of Washington.

Target CEO Brian Cornell has been one of a handful of retail CEOs flagging what they described as rising theft over the past year or so. Cornell had held steadfast he didn’t want to resort to closing stores even despite mounting losses. Target said in May that theft was cutting into its bottom line and it expected related losses could be $500 million more than last year, when losses from theft were estimated to be anywhere from $700 million to $800 million. So that means losses could top $1.2 billion this fiscal year.

Moreover, Cornell told analysts in August that violent incidents against workers at Target stores increased 120 percent for the first five months of the year compared with the same period a year ago.

“Our team continues to face an unacceptab­le amount of retail theft and organized retail crime,” Cornell told analysts. “Unfortunat­ely, safety incidents associated with theft are moving in the wrong direction.”

It’s unclear how much money retailers broadly are losing due to organized retail crime — or if the problem has substantia­lly increased. But the issue has received more notice in the past few years as high-profile smashand-grab retail thefts and flash mob robberies have garnered national media attention.

 ?? JOHN TAGGART/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Customers at the Target store in East Harlem neighborho­od of New York on Tuesday. Target is closing that store and eight others due, it said, to theft and threats to workers and customers.
JOHN TAGGART/NEW YORK TIMES Customers at the Target store in East Harlem neighborho­od of New York on Tuesday. Target is closing that store and eight others due, it said, to theft and threats to workers and customers.

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