Chamber Encourages Residents to “Shop Locally”
Chamber Encourages Residents to “Shop Locally”
By Mike Scott
Shop Locally. These two words may be more important now than ever. In today’s shaky economy, supporting our local businesses is essential to the future of the community. After all, these businesses provide personal services, employ people, pay taxes, and drive the local economy.
Kahoka and Clark County don’t have the benefit of a large manufacturing base, and if we did, we’d live in a very different community.
The Kahoka/Clark County Chamber of Commerce is encouraging residents to invest in their hometown’s future by shopping locally.
Over the next few months, The Media will partner with the Chamber to highlight local businesses.
“We want to show people how much Kahoka and Clark County has to offer, and to keep some of those tax dollars at home, as well as support our local merchants, “ Chamber President Bev Laffoon stated.
There are many well-documented benefits to our communities and to each of us to choosing local, independently owned businesses. It is not always possible to buy what you need locally, but here is a list of 10 reasons to shop locally whenevery possible.
Top Ten Reason To Shop Locally
1. Buy Local — Support yourself: Several studies have shown that when you buy from an independent, locally owned business, rather than a nationally owned businesses, significantly more of your money is used to make purchases from other local businesses, service providers and farms — continuing to strengthen the economic base of the community.
2. Support community groups: Non-profit organizations receive an average 250% more support from smaller business owners than they do from large businesses.
3. Keep our community unique: Where we shop, where we eat and have fun — all of it makes our community home. Our one-of-a-kind businesses are an integral part of the distinctive character of this place. Our tourism businesses also benefit. “When people go on vacation they generally seek out destinations that offer them
the sense of being someplace, not just anyplace.” ~ Richard Moe, President, National Historic Preservation Trust
4. Reduce environmental impact: Locally owned businesses can make more local purchases requiring less transportation and generally set up shop in town or city centers as opposed to developing on the fringe. This generally means contributing less to sprawl, congestion, habitat loss and pollution.
5. Create more good jobs: Small local businesses are the largest employer nationally and in our community, provide the most jobs to residents.
6. Get better service: Local businesses often hire people with a better understanding of the products they are selling and take more time to get to know customers.
7. Invest in community: Local businesses are owned by people who live in this community, are less likely to leave, and are more invested in the community’s future.
8. Put your taxes to good use: Local businesses in town centers require comparatively little infrastructure investment and make more efficient use of public services as compared to nationally owned stores entering the community.
9. Buy what you want, not what someone wants you to buy: A marketplace of tens of thousands of small businesses is the best way to ensure innovation and low prices over the long-term. A multitude of small businesses, each selecting products based not on a national sales plan but on their own interests and the needs of their local customers, guarantees a much broader range of product choices.
10. Encourage local prosperity: A growing body of economic research shows that in an increasingly homogenized world, entrepreneurs and skilled workers are more likely to invest and settle in communities that preserve their one-of-a-kind businesses and distinctive character.
We know that not everything you need can be found locally, but when you can, Shop Locally first!