The Maui News

Cashless stores now suffering a backlash

Amazon was forced to backtrack, taking cash in stores where there are no cashiers

- By ALEXANDRA OLSON and KEN SWEET The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Hembert Figueroa just wanted a taco.

So he was surprised to learn the dollar bills in his pocket were no good at Dos Toros Taqueria in Manhattan, one of a small but growing number of establishm­ents across the U.S. where customers can pay only by card or smartphone.

Cash-free stores are generating a backlash among some activists and liberal-leaning policymake­rs who say the practice discrimina­tes against people like Figueroa, who either lack bank accounts or rely on cash for many transactio­ns.

Figueroa, an ironworker, had to stand to the side, holding his taco, until a sympatheti­c cashier helped him find another customer willing to pay for his meal with a card in exchange for cash.

“I had money and I couldn’t pay,” he said.

The issue got some high-profile attention this week when retail giant Amazon bowed to pressure from activists and agreed to accept cash at more than 30 cashless stores, including its Amazon Go conven

ience stores, which have no cashiers, and its book shops. Amazon declined to say when the change would happen.

There is no federal law that requires stores to accept cash, so lawmakers are working on the issue at the state and city level.

Earlier this year, Philadelph­ia became the first city to ban cashless stores, despite efforts by Amazon to dissuade it. New Jersey passed a statewide ban soon after, and a similar ban is working its way through the New York City Council. Before this year there was only one jurisdicti­on that required businesses to accept cash: Massachuse­tts, which passed a law nearly 40 years ago.

“The potential societal cost of a cashless economy I think outweighs the potential benefits for businesses,” said Ritchie Torres, a New York City councilman for the South Bronx who introduced the bill.

Policymake­rs argue that while cashless enterprise­s aren’t widespread now, the practice could expand to more services, including some that cater to lower-income people.

Walmart-owned Sam’s Club opened its first cashier-less store in Dallas last year, using technology that allows customers to scan and pay for items with their smartphone­s. Kroger has installed similar technology in about 400 stores nationwide.

Stadiums in Tampa Bay, Fla., and Atlanta have started to go cashless, or nearly cashless, and the Barclays Center, where the Brooklyn Nets play, is now effectivel­y cashless as well.

Advocates for cashless bans worry technology is moving too fast for the 6.5 percent of American households — 8.4 million — who do not have a bank account, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n.

Figueroa is among the much larger group considered “underbanke­d,” meaning they have a primary bank account but regularly rely on alternativ­e financial services like check cashers. More than 24 million U.S. households are underbanke­d, according to the FDIC.

The issue disproport­ionately affects African-American and Hispanic communitie­s. About 17 percent of African-American and 14 percent of Hispanic households have no bank accounts, compared to just 3 percent of white households, according to the FDIC.

Figueroa, an immigrant from the Dominican Republic, only opened a credit union account two years ago. It took another year to build up enough funds to use his debit card regularly.

He still occasional­ly relies on a check casher if he needs money quickly, and much of his income comes in cash from his weekend job as a busboy. He has no credit card and no apps on his phone and has only shopped online three times.

Business owners who go cashless say they are following the lead of the majority of customers who are abandoning cash payments. Retailers are under pressure to cater to customers with heightened expectatio­ns for fast and seamless service, driven by companies like Amazon, Uber and Grubhub.

Leo Kremer, co-owner of Dos Toros, said the volume of cash transactio­ns at his stores fell from about 50 percent a decade ago to 15 percent last year. That made the cost and logistics of handling cash especially onerous. Before going cashless, Dos Toros locations were robbed twice.

Still, Kremer said the company would adjust if legally required to accept cash.

“There are no bad guys on this issue. Everyone is trying to do the right thing and make sure there are no unintended consequenc­es,” he said.

Critics say banning cashfree stores is an over-reaction.

There are no overall estimates on how many U.S. stores have gone cashless, but it remains a rarity. In New York City, the trend appears to be gaining traction mostly with “fast casual” dining establishm­ents like Dos Toros. Far more common are stores that require a minimum purchase for non-cash payments.

“To call this a trend is a bit of an exaggerati­on,” said J. Craig Shearman, a spokesman for the National Retail Federation in Washington. “It’s not something the average customer would expect to see at every store at the mall any time soon.”

In testimony to a New York City Council committee, Kremer argued that businesses that “consistent­ly serve the unbanked and underbanke­d population aren’t going to go cashless. It wouldn’t make sense for them.”

But financial experts who work with low-income people caution against making assumption­s about the shopping preference­s or buying power of those who rely on cash.

“I’m uncomforta­ble with the idea that certain people don’t shop here so it’s fine to exclude them,” said Justine Zinkin, CEO of Neighborho­od Trust Financial Partners, a financial counseling nonprofit affiliated with the credit union where Figueroa banks.

 ?? AP file photo ?? Standard Cognition, a cashierles­s store in San Francisco, is shown in this photo from 2018. A small number of restaurant­s and stores are going cash-free in the U.S., looking to cater to customers who increasing­ly pay with a card or smartphone. But a backlash is growing because some say it discrimina­tes against those without bank accounts.
AP file photo Standard Cognition, a cashierles­s store in San Francisco, is shown in this photo from 2018. A small number of restaurant­s and stores are going cash-free in the U.S., looking to cater to customers who increasing­ly pay with a card or smartphone. But a backlash is growing because some say it discrimina­tes against those without bank accounts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States