Many people comment that  the  attraction of Mike Evan's store is  it's old-fashioned character.
Whatever odd thing you  may be looking for, Mike Evans has it. Furthermore  he knows where it is.
He came there in the seventies. Home Hardware was upset.  But they moved out to where they could grow and forthwith  grew like  gang-busters.
The Aurora Banner was in Mike's location in the seventies. They constructed  the barn board facade . For old-time ambiance.Like in a western movie.
Many  retailers  move  from downtown to where they can expand  because of  success  downtown. Unhappily,  they take their shoppers  with them.
Malls were built north and south of us in the sixties and seventies because  our  growth was frozen. We were not growing a market.
There was an exodus  of shoppers  with Hillcrest. Then   retailers went  with the advent of Upper Canada Mall. Yet  we didn't have the same experience as downtown Richmond Hill.
Stores  there were vacated and stayed empty. Litter  gathered in the doorways  and blew about in a swirl. Empty windows were screened with yellowing newsprint and coated with grime.
Our stores rented quickly to service providers and  were well maintained. .
Newmarket's downtown was pretty run down for a while. Now it's looking prettier than it ever
did. Standing at the top of the hill, looking down, the street scape is a  picture postcard.   They  have the advantage of having a real Main Street and not a Highway to the North Pole running through the middle of  their town.
There is a concern though.  Merchants are worried  about  town  plans to replace shoppers' parking with a park. Some are closing up shop.
On the other hand, Richmond Hill also has Yonge for their  main street.. The same traffic and parking  problems as Aurora   Yet  Richmond Hill's   downtown came back to itself.  A building like the one we rejected has been constructed on  Yonge Street. They also have many high rise apartments at the north end of town.
Mike Evans came out to support the Centre Street application  every time.
Indoor malls  have their problems as well. .  They are lovely and amenable and attract many visitors.  But rents are steep to cover all the amenities. Visitors  are not necessarily shoppers.
New businesses don't  start up in malls. Old shops  present the best opportunities for new enterprise.
A town can quickly grow a reputation for being hostile to business.
Taking  hundreds of dollars for an application  for a sign variance and refusing to accept
staff advice that it's O.K. to grant it,  is no way  to win friends and influence people.
There are some  things  the municipality cannot control.  We certainly can't advise retailers how to run their business.  But we  can examine how we  run our own  and make sure we do nothing to discourage others from joining our enterprise.
Businesses are a municipality's  partners in more ways than one.
Merchants  generally don't do what Mike Evans does on a regular basis. He shows up at meetings and gives Council a piece of his mind.
If business is  not doing well and the odds are against them  and they think they're not getting a fair shake from the people who should be conscious of their problems, business  generally  just ups stakes and moves.
I'm not sure that's what's  happening  in our downtown.
Mike thinks it is and I'm afraid it might be.
We've missed a lot of chances to make a difference and we have created new problems.
When my father visits from Calgary, and he does odd jobs around the house for us, he looks for any excuse to go to True Value Hardware to poke around and we know we won't see him for awhile. You don't find stores like this anymore, with all the big box stores taking over.
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