CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2023,
OR THEREAFTER
EDITORS:
TODAY’S COLUMN FOCUSES ON A SINGLE LAW LIKELY TO HAVE MANY UNINTENDED
CONSEQUENCES. THE PREVIOUS COLUMN FOCUSED ON THE GENERAL ISSUE OF PROPOSED NEW LAWS
GETTING INADEQUATE ANALYSIS.
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“STOP RETAIL THEFT? STORE OWNERS SAY THIS
BILL WILL PROMOTE IT”
While California has a long, sad history of poorly
thought-out laws often passed for reasons of ideology, there is no way state
legislators can pretend after passage that they weren’t warned about the current
SB 553, the brainchild of Silicon Valley state Sen. Dave Cortese, a Democrat.
His measure, which had a committee hearing just three days after
a flash mob of 30 or more men and women pulled a snatch-and-grab robbery of a
Nordstrom store in the Westfield Topanga Mall in the Canoga Park section of Los
Angeles, passed the Senate on a 29-8 vote as a worker safety measure.
It aims to prohibit employers from requiring retail workers to confront active suspected shoplifters. Designated security personnel would be exempted, but most stores don't have security officers for reason of cost.
The very minimal consequence of this proposed new law would
be that retailers of all types will keep almost all goods of significant value behind
locked glass panels, thus preventing shoppers from examining possible purchases
except under supervision and preventing many customers in grocery and drug
stores from scrutinizing ingredient lists. It promises to make shopping a
stark, inauspicious experience.
Cortese says his bill aims to protect retail employees from
violence by relieving them of any responsibility to confront thieves.
“With growing awareness of workplace violence,” he said, “California
needs smarter guidelines to keep workers safe…” He notes all employers would be
required to train every worker on how to react to active shoplifting. “Let’s
take every step to prevent another workplace assault or shooting,” he added.
But retailers say the real life consequence will amount to an
open invitation for thieves to take whatever they like, just like the latest large
flash mob, which stole more than $100,000 worth of jewelry and designer goods
from the Topanga Mall Nordstrom and then fled in a fleet of cars reportedly including
multiple luxury BMW and Lexus vehicles.
If they pass the Cortese bill, legislators won’t be able to shrug
this off by saying they weren’t forewarned.
For about 500 small business owners traveled to Sacramento from
points like Fresno, Modesto and the North San Francisco Bay area to protest SB
553 and urge legislators to protect small businesses, not their predators.
Said one demonstration organizer, “SB553 will create a field
day for criminals to sue small business owners, giving criminals the double
jackpot to steal from the business…and again by suing them in a shakedown lawsuit.
All Californians will pay the price for billions of dollars lost to growing retail
theft.”
That statement is obviously correct on its very face. The
fact the world’s most shoplifted Walgreen’s remains open in San Francisco is
some kind of business miracle, and no one can be sure how long it will stay
open. A former Westfield mall on that city’s busy Market Street became so
vacant of stores because of theft and other business impediments that it was
turned back over to the lender, with the lease holder not bothering to wait for
foreclosure.
The business owner demonstrators also asked why, when
California has more worker safety measures in place than any other state, it
needs more new rules.
“(Legislators) should focus on protecting the public and
businesses from violent criminals whose only intent is to steal merchandise,”
the organizer added. “Let’s not do more to destroy the quality of life in our once-great
state.”
But just as police say last year’s SB 357, forbidding arrests
for loitering to solicit sex, has created open season for pimps to further
exploit prostitutes, so SB 553 figures to create an open season for thieves to
ransack just about any store they please.
Isn’t it about time legislators stepped back before knee-jerk
voting for things that may look like mere do-gooder plans? If they did, they
might actually realize their votes have real-world consequences.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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