Eric Pickles tells 'tatty' shopping parades how to succeed
Figures suggest there are a record number of empty shops in the UK
Communities Secretary Eric Pickles has issued a set of guidelines to help "tatty" shopping parades in England compete with the High Street.
He urges small neighbourhood shops to "kick out the louts", set up "savvy" services and "restore local pride".
Labour branded his "shopping list for success" - which comes with no new money - "patronising" but it was welcomed by a leading trade body.
Retail guru Mary Portas has drawn up a £10m plan to revive the High Street.
But the Department for Communities and Local Government says it wants to reassure local convenience stores which employ 10 people or fewer that they have not been forgotten, describing them as "crucial" to the economy.
Local grocery shops, newsagents and cafes have been squeezed by the growth of out-of-town shopping centres and online retail, although are still growing at a faster rate than High Street stores, according to research quoted by the DCLG in a report.
'No-go zones'Mr Pickles said: "In the past too many neighbourhood shopping parades have been left to fade in memory and outlook.
“Start Quote
End Quote National Association of Convenience StoresThe government is giving long overdue credit to local shops and helping them by giving practical advice on how to work together and thrive”
"Convinced they can't compete with the mega stores and besieged by gangs of louts they have become tatty, no-go zones turning our beloved local convenience store into the local inconvenience.
"We've taken action to back local firms and small shops and today we are offering up ways to rescue run down shop parades by kicking out the louts, set up savvy services for shoppers and restoring the local pride in parades."
He said parades should be "thriving beacons of local business, home to the character of the neighbourhood community and the local shoppers' destination of choice".
The guide sets out government support available to local shops, such as the "Community right to bid", which is meant to make it easier for local people to take over "treasured" local assets faced with closure.
'Unhelpful'But Shadow Communities and Local Government minister Roberta Blackman-Woods, for Labour, said: "This is further gesture politics from the government to cover up their lack of an economic plan for the country and for High Streets.
"While shop owners are working hard to keep their businesses going, the government has done little to improve consumer confidence and get our economy moving again.
"Advice like 'Go the extra mile on service' is simply patronising and unhelpful."
But Mr Pickles' guidance was welcomed by the Association of Convenience Stores, which helped draw it up.
Chief Executive James Lowman said: "The government is giving long overdue credit to local shops and helping them by giving practical advice on how to work together and thrive."
He said Mr Pickles' department had made "great strides in its new National planning Policy Framework that will make it harder for big out-of-town stores to open up and destroy the diversity of local parades."
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Comment number 19.
chewho8th June 2012 - 17:30
While we retain a system that serves and gives primacy only to the economy, materialism and consumerism this problem will only get worse. Society has become commodified, controlled and our cultural life impoverished by corporate market dominance and advertising. Our communities and the very idea of community is trashed. Most of those "louts" are simply our young people abandoned by a sick society
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Comment number 13.
Whistling Neil8th June 2012 - 17:18
It's the rents and rates costs that are killing them , hobby shops and local specialities simply cannot compete with the massive advantages of large chains.
A simple measure which is under Pickles direct control - vary the number of stores a company owns. 1 multiply by 0, so rates free, for a large chain say 100 plus then it is rates x 1.5 nominal. Level the playing field.
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Comment number 8.
Jenni Moorhouse8th June 2012 - 17:06
Until people stop buying from the big chain stores & start buying in the small local shops it will be impossible to revive the High Street. I'm as bad as the next person, time means I prefer to get everything in one shop rather than go to several as I am sure many others do. Pickles has obviously never run his own local shop & probably never shops in one!
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Comment number 1.
jurassicflood8th June 2012 - 16:39
Why are small French towns so inviting to shop in? Because there are no Extra, Metro or other chain stores within miles. Because they sell good local products at reasonable prices.
We don't need Mr Pickles to tell us what to do - we need to tell him to look after our local shops first and big chain supermarkets last.
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