READERS RESPOND -- What should be done with shopping carts?
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For years, I have endured the ugliness of abandoned shopping carts in
our city streets, and I do what everyone should: I report to the store
they should be retrieved.
A week ago, I returned from a visit to my native Greece, where, to my
surprise, I saw how the local supermarket has solved the abandoned carts
problem. I think it is a worthy idea because I saw it working there.
The shopping carts are chained in their port to one another and in
order to release the first on the line you insert a coin to a special
device and the cart automatically is released.
You go do your shopping, and when you return you empty your groceries
to your car and then you return the cart to any port. After you anchor
the cart in its place, your coin can be retrieved. This is one of the
positive experiences I had and think is worthy to look at. If a small
country such as Greece is so advanced, why not us?
TIM KATALANOS
Costa Mesa
What is wrong with this picture?
Would someone tell me why a person in business, that has something
stolen from him or her, should have to pay a fine for its return? What is
wrong with this picture? Those shopping carts are not abandoned, they are
stolen. They are removed from a business property without payment or
permission. That is theft.
I suggest that every time you see someone with a stolen shopping cart
not on store property, report them to the police. What a novel concept.
How about if these people were made to collect all the stolen carts as a
punishment for stealing them in the first place? Maybe, just maybe, the
stealing would stop. If someone is to be fined, how about fining the
people who steal the carts?
Has anyone ever thought how much the businesses pay for those carts?
You know, the carts that make it so nice to carry your goods to the car?
And you want to make business owners pay again to get the carts back?
Again I ask, what is wrong with this picture?
JEFF BRACEY
Newport Beach
They are not “abandoned” carts. They are stolen carts.
Let me see if I have this right. Prior to signing a $7,000-per-month
contract with a company to retrieve “abandoned” shopping carts, the city
of Costa Mesa is considering fining store owners of these abandoned
carts. Taxpayers do not want to pay for picking up the carts, but if we
charge the stores, we simply will pay for it in the higher cost of
groceries.
How about this? For three months, take the $7,000 and pay for a police
officer to sit a block or two away from the stores that have been the
“biggest offenders.” If they see me pushing a shopping cart down the
street, stop me and attempt to determine if I own it. If the name Ralphs
or Albertsons or Smart & Final is on the cart, there is a better than a
99% chance that I have stolen it. Since the cart costs more than $200, I
could be charged with grand theft.
Remember, with our three strikes law, the third time that I am caught
“stealing” carts requires a mandatory 25-year prison sentence. If that
keeps the supermarkets from “abandoning” their carts, sign the contract
and start fining them.
HOWARD WELLS
Newport Beach
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