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Retail runaround: with few shopping choices close to home, residents of Chicago's black neighborhoods are most likely to experience the ...


It's 7:45 a.m. Tina Saphir has been awake and milling about for hours. She glances at the corner of her vestibule vestibule /ves·ti·bule/ (ves´ti-bul) a space or cavity at the entrance to a canal.vestib´ular

vestibule of aorta  a small space at root of the aorta.
 at a heap of recently purchased merchandise. Everything must go. Either it didn't fit or didn't work. But the mother of three decides that it must wait for another day.

Today, she's headed on a road trip. It's one that doesn't happen as often as she'd like because of time and distance. But, with the minivan gassed up and the trunk full of beverages, she's just about ready to go. Her destination: the grocery store.

It will be late afternoon by the time Saphir returns. She'll spend a majority of the next four hours driving to and around a mostly white North Side neighborhood searching for groceries and other items at stores she cannot fred in her predominantly black South Side neighborhood. "There's money on the South Side and nowhere to spend it," said Saphir, 36, an African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  who lives with her husband and their three children in the Kenwood neighborhood.

During this holiday shopping season, residents of Chicago's black communities are likely to spend nearly two-thirds of their money outside of their neighborhoods, far more than those living in Latino, mixed or white areas, a Chicago Reporter analysis of consumer market information shows.

In Chicago, the rate of major retailers per 10,000 residents is nearly three times higher in white areas than in black areas, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the analysis. Some black neighborhoods are home to far fewer retailers than white neighborhoods even when their incomes are similar.

This means blacks in Chicago are likely to spend more time, money and energy than whites when they buy gifts, groceries, clothes, tools and other items at stores located far from their homes. It also means black neighborhoods lose out on billions of dollars in consumer spending Consumer demand or consumption is also known as personal consumption expenditure. It is the largest part of aggregate demand or effective demand at the macroeconomic level.  each year that could help revitalize those areas. Furthermore, Chicago could be losing millions of dollars in sales tax sales tax, levy on the sale of goods or services, generally calculated as a percentage of the selling price, and sometimes called a purchase tax. It is usually collected in the form of an extra charge by the retailer, who remits the tax to the government.  revenue as many drive to south suburban Calumet City Calumet City, city (1990 pop. 37,840), Cook co., NE Ill., a suburb in the greater Chicago metropolitan area, near Ind.; settled 1868, inc. 1911. Once heavily industrial, the city is primarily residential with some light manufacturing. , Lansing and Evergreen Park Evergreen Park, village (1990 pop. 20,874), Cook co., NE Ill., a residential suburb of Chicago; inc. 1893. , among others, to do their shopping.

The Reporter mapped nearly 900 Chicago addresses of companies that Stores listed as the top-selling retailers in seven categories: supermarket, apparel, department store, home improvement, drug store, restaurant, and value retailer, such as Target. Stores, a monthly magazine of the National Retail Federation, the world's largest retail trade association, ranked the retail companies by their 2004 sales revenues.

The Reporter also examined consumer expenditures and retail sales figures sales figures nplcifras fpl de ventas  for each of Chicago's 77 community areas. The data were provided by MetroEdge, a market research firm, for the city's department of planning. The Reporter defined black and white communities as being at least two-thirds black or white. Asian and Latino neighborhoods were at least 50 percent Asian or Latino. The Reporter found:

* Residents of black communities spend an estimated 64 percent of their consumer dollars, more than $5.3 billion a year, outside of their neighborhoods.

* Among neighborhoods with median household earnings between $40,000 and $50,000 per capita [Latin, By the heads or polls.] A term used in the Descent and Distribution of the estate of one who dies without a will. It means to share and share alike according to the number of individuals. , white areas have 47 percent more major retailers than black areas.

* White neighborhoods have nearly eight times more apparel retailers than black neighborhoods.

* There are three times more major retailers in communities with a median income greater than $50,000 per capita than those where the median is less than $30,000.

Retail consultants said major retailers tend to herd where others have gone. That's led to a dearth of retail options on the South and West sides. When a major retailer does consider those areas, however, they're confronted with other issues that prevent them from opening stores there, such as their overall unfamiliarity with the neighborhoods and perceptions about crime, the consultants said.

"The perceptions are usually worse than the reality," said John C. Melaniphy III, formerly of Melaniphy and Associates, a North Side consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee
consulting company

business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a
 providing site selection and market assistance. "It's going to take time, but there is going to be more business."

In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified"
meantime, meanwhile
, Saphir has teamed with other South Siders who've agreed that the best way to get what they need from the stores they prefer is to car-pool to the North Side after dropping their children off at Murray Language Academy in Hyde Park Hyde Park, park, London, England
Hyde Park, 615 acres (249 hectares) in Westminster borough, London, England. Once the manor of Hyde, a part of the old Westminster Abbey property, it became a deer park under Henry VIII.
. That way, they can share the burden--and fuel costs--of driving across town.

Warmed by one of four remote-controlled fireplaces in her home, Saphir dresses 6-month-old Lael on the living room couch. She has gotten 5-year-old Ian off to school and is getting ready to drop 8-year-old Zoe off at Murray. Embracing a worn library copy of Captain Underpants and the Wrath of the Wicked Wedgie wedgie - (Fairchild) A bug. Probably related to wedged.  Woman," Zoe perches at the kitchen table. "Zoe doesn't like being late for school," Saphir says of the precocious youth whose report card on the refrigerator boasts As and Bs in all of her classes, including Japanese.

It's 8:30 a.m. Saphir flicks her hair into a low ponytail, slips on a pair of sneakers sneakers
Noun, pl

US, Canad, Austral & NZ canvas shoes with rubber soles

sneakers npl (US) → zapatos mpl de lona; zapatillas fpl 
 and hoists a backpack over her head. She walks out the door, greeted by signs of the economic prosperity of her Kenwood neighbors. Manicured lawns are spread with gold leaves moistened by a light rain. Plumes of smoke are exhaled from the tailpipes of import cars bearing weathered alumni license plate covers. Street sweepers lurch toward the block where Saphir lives in a four-level graystone. There are million-dollar homes two blocks south. In a year, the Saphirs expect to get as much for their home.

If she had lived there anytime from the 1940s through the 1960s, Saphir would have had better luck shopping in her own neighborhood. During that time, the intersection of 47th Street and Cottage Grove Cottage Grove, village (1990 pop. 22,935), Washington co., SE Minn., near the St. Croix River; inc. 1965. There is farming (cattle, sheep, corn, and soybeans) and manufacturing (chemicals and machinery).  Avenue, just a few blocks from Saphir's home, was at the heart of a successful business district for blacks. But things began to sour in the 1970s as many of the area's middle-income residents began moving to other parts of the city.

Residents near the Ida B. Wells Ida B. Wells, also known as Ida B. Wells-Barnett (July 16, 1862 – March 25, 1931), was an African American civil rights advocate and an early women's rights advocate active in the Woman Suffrage Movement.  public housing development moved elsewhere, and less wealthy people moved in. Businesses fled, creating a skeleton of commercial development that has since spawned a difficult environment to lure developers.

Vacant buildings now dot Cottage Grove, where the intersection at 47th Street is known for a liquor store with late hours and people congregating in front of businesses.

Bernita Johnson-Gabriel, New Communities Program director of the Quad Communities Development Corporation, recently drove through the area with a representative from a company interested in opening a business there. The development corporation, chaired by 4th Ward Alderman Toni Preckwinkle Toni Preckwinkle (March 17 1947 (1947--) (age 60)) is an alderman in the Chicago City Council representing Chicago's 4th ward in Cook County, Illinois, United States. , attracts businesses to the Douglas, Oakland, Grand Boulevard Grand Boulevard may refer to one of the following:
  • Grand Boulevard (Budapest), Hungary
  • Grand Boulevard (Oklahoma City), Oklahoma, U.S.
  • Grand Boulevard, Perth, Australia
See also
  • Grand Avenue
  • Grand Street
 and North Kenwood neighborhoods. The area has $191 million in purchasing power Purchasing Power

1. The value of a currency expressed in terms of the amount of goods or services that one unit of money can buy. Purchasing power is important because, all else being equal, inflation decreases the amount of goods or services you'd be able to purchase.

2.
 per square mile, 23 percent more than the citywide figure, according to a 2004 study by MetroEdge. Most of those dollars are now spent outside the area.

Johnson-Gabriel sensed some caution and probed more. The representative told her that, aside from statistics, there are other important things he's looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 when deciding where to locate: Was this a place he'd let his daughter work at 1 a.m.?

She has held a subsequent meeting with the representative, but they have yet to strike a deal.

"You're not looking at statistics when you're looking at safety. You're [physically] looking out there," said Chinwe Onyeagoro, a planning consultant with OH Community Partners, who helped Johnson-Gabriel's group develop a five-year plan Five-Year Plan, Soviet economic practice of planning to augment agricultural and industrial output by designated quotas for a limited period of usually five years.  to bring retail to Cottage Grove.

Retail consultants said some areas may be deemed risky for unmeasurable things, like poor lighting, blight, or people loitering Loitering (IPA pronunciation: ['lɔɪtəˌrɪŋ] is an intransitive verb meaning to stand idly, to stop numerous times, or to delay and procrastinate. . Retailers avoid such areas because they may require more lighting, fencing or security.

"One of the biggest barriers is the perception of crime--right or wrong," Melaniphy said. "Obviously, we look at crime statistics when we conduct a study in an area where we think crime might be a factor. So we try to differentiate the perception and the reality."

The Quad Communities group has created a multi-pronged redevelopment plan that includes marketing, beautification beau·ti·fy  
tr. & intr.v. beau·ti·fied, beau·ti·fy·ing, beau·ti·fies
To make or become beautiful.



beau
 and networking. The group will also embark on a heavy-handed marketing campaign to pursue proven urban developers.

The plan includes trying to keep people from congregating in front of businesses. That way, the perception of fear and crime will be lessened, Onyeagoro said. "What we're focusing on doing now is bringing life to the corridor and bringing change," she said. "So, when developers drive by, they see things are going on and we're not sitting back and waiting for them."

When considering potential sites, retailers might spend thousands of dollars on research to assess land availability and market profiles with demographic and socioeconomic information such as household size, income and education. They're also mindful of close competition and traffic volume, said George Rosenbaum, chairman of Leo Leo, in astronomy
Leo [Lat.,=the lion], northern constellation lying S of Ursa Major and on the ecliptic (apparent path of the sun through the heavens) between Cancer and Virgo; it is one of the constellations of the zodiac.
 J. Shapiro and Associates, a Chicago-based survey research firm.

However, their primary form of research is done through site visits and in-person surveys. "You interview the managers and sales people of other stores in the area. They will very candidly tell you if they're having problems because of a shooting or fear of crime. But you really pick it up directly from consumers," Melaniphy said.

Retailers also try to anticipate possible "blind spots"--theft, a 5-year expressway construction project or unfavorable traffic patterns. "What you now have to do is go there, look at the area, walk it to see if there are some unexpected barriers that would impede people's ability to get to the store," Rosenbaum said.

Some places are nixed because existing stores are dissimilar, or there are too many nearby vacancies. "When the retailer drives the corridor and sees 30 percent of the retail is [vacant], how can you convince them [their business] is going to be successful?" said Onyeagoro.

But experts said most retailers aren't intimately familiar with minority neighborhoods and could rely more heavily on their perceptions than research that might suggest that there's money to be made there.

"When you look at some of the national companies and their real estate representatives, it's kind of a fact: there's not that many blacks, Hispanics and [people of] other ethnic origins that really know the neighborhood and the characteristics of the neighborhood," Melaniphy said. "And their reputation is on the line to select the location that's going to generate a required sales volume."

Of the Gap company's 21 Chicago stores, 14 are in white communities, including six in Lincoln Park Lincoln Park, city (1990 pop. 41,832), Wayne co., SE Mich., a suburb adjacent to Detroit, on the Detroit River; inc. 1921. It is a residential community in an area marked by a significant decline in industry. . The company, which owns Banana Republic banana republic
n.
A small country that is economically dependent on a single export commodity, such as bananas, and is typically governed by a dictator or the armed forces.
, the Gap and Old Navy, has two stores in Latino areas and one in black neighborhoods. "We evaluate all of our locations in the context of that specific market. We first look at the existing store base in the market to determine how and where we're already represented," said Gap spokeswoman Sarah Anderson. "Then, we work to identify the sales potential of that particular market and analyze the shopping patterns of that market's population."

Chipotle chi·pot·le  
n.
A ripe jalapeño pepper that has been dried and smoked for use in cooking.



[American Spanish, from Nahuatl xipotli.]

Noun 1.
, a subsidiary of McDonald's Corp., has 17 restaurants in Chicago. Eight are in white neighborhoods, one in Latino areas and none in black neighborhoods. "Ethnicity is not a variable that we look at. At least it's not a primary variable," said Chipotle spokesman Chris Arnold Christopher Paul Arnold (born November 6, 1947 in Long Beach, California) is a former infielder in Major League Baseball. He was drafted by the San Francisco Giants in the 11th round of the 1965 amateur draft, and played for the Giants from 1971 to 1976. . "The things that matter most to us are education level, income levels and a balance between daytime population and nighttime population."

The Limited Brands operates its Limited stores as well as Bath and Body Works, Express and Victoria's Secret For the Sonata Arctica single, see Victoria's Secret (song)

Victoria's Secret is an American retailer of high quality lingerie and beauty products.[2]
. Of the company's 18 Chicago locations, 12 are in white areas, and four are in Latino areas. None are in black community areas.

When asked about the disparity, company spokesman Anthony Hebron said: "Limited Brands is a mall-based company with stores located in top-tier malls and high customer traffic areas in Chicago."

Developing models for risky neighborhoods may include coming up with new ways to train employees, advertise, control theft and accept credit cards for purchases, Rosenbaum said. "Very often these problems seem very foreboding."

Instead, retailers use a "herd mentality Herd mentality describes how people are influenced by their peers to adopt certain behaviors, follow trends, and/or purchase items. Examples of the herd mentality include the early adopters of high technology products such as cell phones and iPods, as well as stock market trends, ," locating their stores where others have created a "critical mass" of patrons, Melaniphy said. "So many stores like to be near a Wal-Mart or a Target even though they sell similar merchandise."

But Saphir is among many middle-class African Americans starving for commercial development in gentrifying South Side neighborhoods like Douglas, Grand Boulevard, Kenwood, Oakland, Washington Park This article is about baseball parks in New York. For other uses, see Washington Park (disambiguation).

Washington Park was the name given to two different major league baseball parks in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, located at 3rd St.
 and Woodlawn.

On this particular day, Saphir is making her shopping road trip with two other South Siders, but sometimes the group includes more. Calling themselves the "Murray moms," the women have mounted these excursions two to four times a month during the past year.

Saphir, a stay-at-home mom, pulls up to Murray Language Academy and walks Zoe inside. She returns to the car with Jill White Jill White is a former New Zealand politician.

From 1993 until 1998, she was a member of Parliament for the Labour Party, first as MP for Manawatu and then as a list MP. She resigned from Parliament in 1998 to become Mayor of Palmerston North.
, a 38-year-old educator and writer, who is white and lives in Hyde Park. Waiting in a nearby cul-de-sac is Conswaila Sydnor-Davis, a 34-year-old African American and former therapist, who operates a T-shirt company from her house down the block from Saphir.

The women take Saphir's Chevy Venture. They stop near the area grocery store but head to the patisserie pa·tis·se·rie  
n.
A bakery specializing in French pastry.



[French pâtisserie, from Old French pastiserie, from pasticier, to make pastry, from *pastitz,
 next door to buy croissants. It's rare that they shop at the grocery--"where you get a box of cereal for $6, where you can get it for $3 anywhere else"--Saphir explains.

The women head north on Lake Shore Drive Lake Shore Drive (colloquially referred to as LSD or simply Lake Shore) is a mostly freeway-standard expressway running parallel with and next to Lake Michigan through Chicago, Illinois, USA. . Always looking for ways to save a few bucks, they talk about how to find inexpensive acting lessons for their children. Sydnor-Davis is paying $185 an acting session for her son. "I can teach him to act," she says. "His mother is as dramatic as anyone else."

"We pay $5," Saphir says of the fee for her daughter's acting lessons. "All summer long, it only cost $230."

"Hey, Denzel [Washington] went to the Boys' Club," White adds as the group approaches McCormick Place Coordinates:

McCormick Place is an enormous exposition complex located in Chicago, Illinois.
. "He didn't have a fancy acting school,"

Saphir retorts, "Unless you want him to do commercials, they can get all that for $5."

The car's speedometer speedometer, instrument that indicates speed. A cable from an automotive speedometer is attached to the rear of the transmission of an automobile; the cable turns at a rate proportional to the speed of the car.  reads 60 miles per hour as they zoom by a 40 mph speed limit sign near Navy Pier. In all, the drive spans more than 10 miles and takes the women through seven neighborhoods before exiting at North Avenue.

It's 9:45 a.m., and the outline of neatly lined stores begins to emerge as the women get closer to their destinations. Each month, they make several stops at the Clybourn Galleria shopping center shopping center, a concentration of retail, service, and entertainment enterprises designed to serve the surrounding region. The modern shopping center differs from its antecedents—bazaars and marketplaces—in that the shops are usually amalgamated into  in Lincoln Park. White likes Whole Foods where she can get bulk nuts, yeast and spices. Saphir and Sydnor-Davis prefer Trader Joe's Trader Joe's is a privately held chain of specialty grocery stores headquartered in Monrovia, California. As of September 2007, Trader Joe's has a total of 284 stores.[1] , which offers affordable prepackaged pre·pack·age  
tr.v. pre·pack·aged, pre·pack·ag·ing, pre·pack·ag·es
To wrap or package (a product) before marketing.

Adj. 1.
 organic foods. On her last trip, Saphir set her sights on a TV tray A TV tray or TV dinner tray is a type of collapsible furniture that functions as a small, portable table. It became popular in the 1950s as a way to hold food and beverage items while watching TV, the iconic item being a TV dinner.  at Crate and Barrel. She's picking it up today.

The women envy the many North Siders within walking distance of these stores. According to the Reporter's analysis, Kenwood has just one major retailer, a Walgreens. Lincoln Park has 50.

Approaching Trader Joe's, White points to Sam's Wines and Spirits Sam's Wines and Spirits is a Chicago-based liquor superstore chain. It has three stores in the Chicago area. The company's flagship store in Chicago's Lincoln Park neighborhood is the largest grossing liquor outlet in the United States. . "Here's one thing you don't have to leave the South Side to buy."

Every Sunday morning Sunday Morning may refer to:
  • "Sunday Morning (radio program)", a Canadian radio program formerly aired on CBC Radio One
  • CBS News Sunday Morning, a television news program on CBS in the United States
  • Sunday Morning (TBS TV series)
, in a quiet South Side block off 87th Street, Maria Scott waits for Todd, the newspaper carrier, to arrive. It's her ritual. From 6:30 a.m. to 6:45 a.m., usually before jumping in the shower or eating breakfast, she's peering out the window of her modest ranch home, past the Toyotas and Lexuses, waiting for the newspaper to be delivered.

When the Chicago Tribune arrives, Scott, 42, burns through the packaging to get to the flyers advertising stores nowhere near her Calumet Calumet, region, United States
Calumet (kăl`ymĕt'), industrialized region of NW Ind. and NE Ill., along the south shore of Lake Michigan.
 Heights home. "Do they think we're too poor that we won't shop there?" said Scott, who owns and operates an industrial and residential cleaning service. "It's black people that have money too, you know."

Scott remembers when her "addiction" to shopping began. As a child, she and her mother would take a cab downtown every Wednesday to meet her father for lunch at Ronny's Steakhouse. On one such visit, it was her father's payday--he was a carpenter helping to build the Sears Tower. After lunch, her mother deposited his check. But her mother set aside some money so they could shop at Marshall Field's.

Scott maintains her penchant for the upscale store. This week, the store is advertising a cherry curio cu·ri·o  
n. pl. cu·ri·os
A curious or unusual object of art or piece of bric-a-brac.



[Short for curiosity.
 for $349. Scott's not sure if it'll fit in her living room and has to call the store for details. She'd rather see the scale for herself, but the nearest store is 40 minutes away at River Oaks Mall in south suburban Calumet City--even longer if she gets caught by the freight train crossing at 115th Street and Torrence Avenue.

When Scott does shop in her neighborhood, it's usually at the Target on Cottage Grove near 87th Street. But, when it comes to dressing her family, she's limited. There's one neighborhood store where she says she can buy quality clothes. The last time she shopped there, she bought a pair of shoes, pants and a top. The bill came to $230. "I took [the items] back," Scott said.

Not only do black neighborhoods feature far fewer clothing stores than white neighborhoods, but the shopping choices found in black areas often fail to stack up with more upscale stores found in white communities.

There are 46 apparel retailers in white neighborhoods, including the Gap, Banana Republic and Express. The most notable of six apparel stores in black neighborhoods is Marshall's.

South Sider Denise McDuffie Martin, 48, regularly shops at Bloomingdale's and Tiffany, and recently paid $5,000 to rent the Excalibur, a River North night club, for her daughter's Sweet 16 birthday party of 150 guests. "A lot of banks are moving out to the South Side," said Martin, a federal administrative law judge administrative law judge n. a professional hearing officer who works for the government to preside over hearings and appeals involving governmental agencies. They are generally experienced in the particular subject matter of the agency involved or of several agencies.  who lives in the Burnside neighborhood. "I think that shows they're willing to move out to the customers. Hopefully, some of the stores will, too."

While there is more concentrated wealth on the North Side, South Side residents spend billions of dollars each year--although much of it appears to be done outside of South Side neighborhoods.

According to the Reporter analysis, residents of the city's white neighborhoods outside of the O'Hare community area log $8.2 billion in consumer spending with businesses in those neighborhoods raking in $8.6 billion in retail sales. The picture is much different in the city's 27 black communities. In all, residents there spend $8.3 billion a year, but retail sales for businesses there stands at just $2.9 billion.

Retail "leakage" is the term retail insiders use for the difference between consumer spending and retail sales in a given community. It's meant to measure what residents spend outside of their communities.

The sum of leakage costs for apparel and grocery items in black neighborhoods totaled more than $792 million for 2004. But, in white neighborhoods, businesses sold a combined $263 million more than neighborhood residents spent on apparel and grocery items. That's because Saphir, White, Sydnor-Davis and others from other parts of the city frequently shop there.

After the "Murray moms" pull into a complimentary parking garage, they walk into Trader Joe's grabbing crimson shopping carts.

Fifty-three minutes later, the women head to the checkout where a young brown-haired cashier asks where they're from. Hyde Park, they tell him. "We see a lot of people from Hyde Park," the cashier says.

Angelica Herrera, Frank Life, Sean Redmond, Amy Shebeck and John Wicencyjusz helped research this article.

These articles are the third installment in a three-part series focusing on money. Chicago Matters is an annual public information series initiated and funded by The Chicago Community Trust, with programming by 11, Chicago Public Radio Chicago Public Radio (CPR) is a noncommercial, public radio station broadcasting from Chicago, Illinois. Financed primarily by listener contributions, Chicago Public Radio is affiliated with both National Public Radio and Public Radio International. , the Chicago Public Library and The Chicago Reporter.

THE NUMBERS

Commercial chasm

Among seven retail categories examined, apparel retailers have the widest disparity in store locations, with 46 locations in white neighborhoods compared to six in black neighborhoods. In Lincoln Park alone, there are 16 major apparel retailers. While major grocers like Jewel and Dominick's are found in many African American and Latino areas, there are more of those stores in mixed and white communities. Specialty grocers like Trader Joe's and Whole Foods are only found in white neighborhoods. With such wide disparities in store locations, residents of black and Latino areas spend more of their money elsewhere. "Leakage" is the amount of consumer spending that exceeds retail sales for a given market. The map below shows the percentage of a neighborhood's consumer dollars that are spent outside of the neighborhood. In 2004, there were 10 neighborhoods where leakage rates exceeded 75 percent--all of them were predominantly black.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Notes: "Black" and "white" areas were at least two-thirds black or white. "Asian" and "Latino" areas were at least half Asian or Latino. All other areas were considered mixed. The analysis excluded the O'Hare community area and the Loop.

Source: Stores, U.S. Census Bureau, Abercrombie and Fitch, American Eagle, Ann Taylor, Burlington Coat Factory Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse Corporation is a national department store retailer focusing on clothing and shoes, with over 360 stores in 42 states (as of 2006). In early 2007, the first location to be opened in Canada will be at the Vaughan Mills mall in Toronto.  Warehouse, Charming Shoppes, Gap, Limited, MarMaxx, Talbots, Albertson's Albrecht Discounts, Kroger, Safeway Foods, Supervalu, Trader Joe's, Whole Foods, MetroEdge, and Chicago Department of Planning and Development; analyzed by The Chicago Reporter.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Community Renewal Society
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:INVESTIGATION
Author:Kelly, Kimbriell
Publication:The Chicago Reporter
Geographic Code:1U3IL
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:3510
Previous Article:Turf battles: the presence of day laborers at the Home Depot's parking lot stirs controversy in Cicero.(KEEPING CURRENT)
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