SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : Rage Against the Machine

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Thomas M. who started this subject9/7/2004 8:01:23 AM
From: exdaytrader76 of 1296
 
Wal-Mart Supercenter Construction Site Vandalized
Structure may have sustained almost a million dollars in damages
Asheville Global Report agrnews.org
By Willy Rosencrans

Asheville, North Carolina, Aug. 31 (AGR) — In the early hours of Saturday, Aug. 28, two Volvo dump trucks, each with a 37-ton load capacity, were driven repeatedly into the walls of Asheville’s new and highly controversial Wal-Mart Supercenter, still under construction on the site of the old Sayles Bleachery. The damage was discovered later that morning by workers and reported to police.

“They broke in,” said James Powell, site foreman of Nearen Construction, “got access to the dump trucks, and proceded to ram the Wal-Mart walls. They rammed the south-east end twice and the front entrance three times. One truck they left in the wall, and the other they hung up on a light pole base [in the lot].”

No arrests have been reported, and investigators have not identified any suspects. Asheville Police Lt. David Rutledge said the APD has leads but declined to comment further. He did say, however, that “We don’t have anything to lead us to believe that this is the work of eco-terrorists.”

An Asheville Citizen-Times story said the incident caused “an estimated $900,000 in damage,” the same figure included in a police report assigning $200,000 to each dump truck and $500,000 to the walls. Powell said he didn’t know who arrived at that figure, and that company engineers would need to assess the damage before an official estimate could be made.

If this estimate is even roughly accurate, it dwarfs similar incidents at other Wal-Mart construction sites.

In October 2003, up to 30 pieces of equipment were sabotaged at a Supercenter construction site in Martinsville, Indiana. Sand was poured into fuel tanks, engine and hydraulic hoses were cut, tires were slashed and windows were broken, causing “tens of thousands of dollars” in damages, according to local news sources. The Earth Liberation Front (ELF) initially claimed responsibility but later disavowed it.

Sabotage reminiscent of Asheville’s occurred in Savoy, Illinois, in February 2001. Steel columns not yet attached to the roofing of an as-yet unfinished Supercenter were knocked down with a forklift; other columns were unbolted from the roofing and an unmanned bulldozer was set in gear and sent into the framework, bringing down part of the structure. The incident caused $100,000 in damages.

Local unions had been picketing the site since construction began, and a local police lieutenant suggested that they were behind the damage. Wal-Mart had hired non-union wokers from Kentucky and Tennessee rather than local organized labor.

No arrests have been made in either case.

The Asheville Supercenter, opposed by a large contingency of Asheville residents -- from neighborhood associations to environmental groups -- was the subject of several years of painful, acrimonious debate prior to its approval by city council in July 2002. Initial word of the corporate giant’s plans for a new Supercenter was met with outcry over its ethics: Wal-Mart is fiercely anti-union, supports sweatshop labor around the world, destroys local businesses unable to compete with it, and pays poorly and offers poor benefits. Recently it has been faced with lawsuits over discrimination against women and violations of wage-and-hour laws.

Locals also raised fears of traffic congestion and adverse floodplain impacts — the Bleachery’s 78 acres are located on an environmentally sensitive bend in the Swannanoa River.

In September 2000 developers were denied the variance they were seeking to make construction possible, and Wal-Mart claimed to abandon the plan. The 2001 city council elections installed a majority whose campaigns were funded by a political action committee, Citizens for New Leadership (CNL), organized by one of the property’s owners. In January 2002, during an annual council retreat, the CNL appointees voiced complaints from the “business community” about zoning laws, and council asked city staff to study cutting red tape.

The council replaced a Board of Adjustments member in March 2002 who had opposed granting the variance, rather than reappointing her as had been expected; the only other member opposed to the variance was ineligible to run again. One month later two variances were granted; a conditional-use permit was made for development of the site, and in July Wal-Mart was back on the table. Grading, clearing, and cutting on the 200,000-square-foot site began in November 2003.

The pace has quickened since the dump trucks left their mark.

“This won’t set us back as far as the grand opening,” said Powell. “It’ll be repaired in time.” Horne Properties, the current developer, says the construction should be completed as planned sometime in January.

The company can easily absorb the financial blow: Wal-Mart has grown to become the world’s largest company, eclipsing Exxon-Mobil, General Motors, and General Electric. Its sales comprise two percent of the total US Gross Domestic Product. In fact, it is the nineteenth largest economy in the world. Its import volume exceeds that of both Great Britain and Russia, and it is China’s fifth largest trading partner. If Wal-Mart maintains its current rate of growth, it will become the world’s first trillion-dollar company by the end of the next decade.

Wal-Mart’s media representative for the southeast, Glen Wilkins, didn’t even learn of the incident until two days later, when AGR staff called for an interview.

The dump truck exploit has, however, inspired Horne Properties to increase security around the site: five security guards are to keep watch over it all night. And despite the seeming insignificance of a million-dollar night out compared to the hundreds of billions in annual sales reaped by Wal-Mart, somewhere in the giant’s chain of command, the case has been registered and catalogued, added to a growing list.

guerrillanews.com
with picture. It looks like just a dump truck-sized hole in a wall. And dump trucks don't cost $200,000.
truckpaper.com
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext