I am about to write to the West Briton about this.
We have had some tozzers wandering around objecting to an opening of a Waitrose for these reasons outlined above, the death of the High Street, the parking etc etc. And Waitrose (and JLewis), one of the best retail employers there is, because of their cooperative values.
Truro High Street isn't too badly affected.....I think it was B00 who had said how she had enjoyed visiting a few months back. However, there are three things that need fronting:
(i) The parking charges - between £3-60 and £4-10 for three hours - single handedly this puts folk off and pulls them to out of town.A couple of shop keepers and I were reckoning £1 would bring them back in and for the delta, say £2000 to go on the business rates. If business for a small shop was to go up say 10%, they are quids in and the council income is still safe.
(ib) over-zealous traffic wardens. We have some nice fair ones and a couple who make Hitler look a pussycat.
(ii) The Chamber of Commerce - nothing from them as to promotion of City businesses and the small shop, nothing that puts Truro on the tourist map as a "shopping destination" - there are some arts events (one coming up called "My City") that the Council put on and that i good - but nothing from the CoC or the shops to get behind it.
(iii) Small food shops - Cornwall has great food but we are nothing like other counties who get behind their produce and actively encourage it. I would strongly advocate a champion to be appointed and bring together a food platform, perhaps council funded for three years passing over to the members involved. Even Waitrose are backing a Food for Cornwall store on their site, a chance for them to see wqho is successful and, no doubt, suck them into their grips.
It is all very well wingeing, which the Cornish do well as they do not manage change very well. It's a case of folk seeing a risk and getting off their fat backsides and doing something about it. "Go down all guns blazing" if it doesn't work but if it does.........I have seen some wonderful projects in the USA for example in developing small artisan centres, one using an old sugar mill, to counter the blandness of their "High Streets" (i,e, shopping malls).