Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Dollar General store has been approved

In what was quite possibly the most crowded Alexandria Planning and Zoning meeting in recent history, the residents of Summerlake Subdivision showed up in droves to show that they are not happy about the Dollar General to be located in their subdivision.  

A standing room only crowd watched with heavy hearts as Alexandria Planning and Zoning commission voted 4-3 in favor of forever changing the face of their subdivision.  Several residents were unhappy that they were not allowed to speak on the record in opposition to the store.  However, John Jewell, chairman of the P&Z said that no comments were going to be allowed during the meeting.

Earlier in the day over 20 emails were sent back and forth between Summerlake residents and 3 members of city council and the mayor of Alexandria.  City council members Barbara Weber, Stacey Graus, and Dave Hart as well as Mayor Rachford all helped everyone understand the process that was going to take place that night.  The main topic of conversation during the emails was if city council members had the right to represent the people of Alexandria at Planning and Zoning meetings.  The resounding answer was a firm and fearful "NO!".  City council years ago had tried to represent the citizens by opposing a Speedway gas station at the corner Poplar Ridge road and US 27.  When they were successful in stopping the project Speedway successfully sued the city and members of council and came away victorious.  It is very easy to see that this has left a very bad taste in all city council members mouths.


All the hard work and opposition was for not as the meeting ended on a sour note and residents walked away disappointed not only in the vote, but the process that explicitly excluded them from having any say whatsoever in a building that they would have to live with as long as they remained in the subdivision.

Channel 9 news was present for the meeting, their news clip can be viewed here;




Chris Mayhew from the Alexandria Community Recorder was also present.  His article can be viewed here; 
http://cincinnati.com/blogs/campbellcountyconnects/2011/09/21/alexandria-dollar-general-plans-move-forward/

Chris really did a great job of capturing the meeting on paper.



Alexandria Dollar General plans move forward
By Chris Mayhewcmayhew@nky.com
ALEXANDRIA – Plans for a new Dollar General store at the entrance to the Summerlake subdivision off U.S. 27 in Alexandria have been approved.

The site plan for a store on land in front of the subdivision previously zoned suitable for highway commercial uses was approved by the Alexandria Planning and Zoning Commission Tuesday, Sept. 20.

A standing room only crowd of more than 60 residents of the subdivision concerned about how the store will impact their property values and the traffic flow around the only entrance to their neighborhood watched the meeting and decision without having a chance to comment.

The commission was serving in an administrative capacity and therefore outside comment was not relative to the decision they had to make about the site plan, said John Jewell, chairman of the P&Z commission at the start of the meeting.

“We will not be taking public testimony tonight,” Jewell said.

Only the question being considered was whether the site plan before the commission complies with the the city’s code of ordinances and zoning laws, he said. To consider other factors would violate Kentucky law, Jewell said.

“Because whether you like it or whether you don’t it, comes down to does it comply to ordinances or does it not,” he said.

Mike Price, of MAP Engineers in Chattanooga, Tenn., presented the site plan for the proposed 9,200-square-foot Dollar General store to be constructed with brick walls on all four sides.

“Dollar General has identified this as an area that they’re interested in locating a store,” Price said.
Price said the plan proposed is a good one and will be a benefit to the community.

Commission member Rick Neltner said he was concerned about truck deliveries tying up the entrance to the subdivision when people were trying to go to work in the mornings.

Price said there are typically two truck deliveries per week to the store and a truck would not take more than one minute to get into the store’s lot and off the subdivision’s entry road.

Jewell said two deliveries per week didn’t sound like much to be concerned about.

As Jewell called for a vote to accept the site plan application two or three different members of the crowd shouted “deny this” and asked commission members to vote against the plan.

Jewell then instructed commission members to disregard the comments and asked Alexandria Police Chief Mike Ward to require the audience to remain silent.

Using a roll call vote, the commission approved the plan by a 4-3 margin. Voting yes were Jewell, Dan Feldman, Rick Neltner and Ron Johnson. Voting no were Sonny Markus, Susi Thomas and Stu Stormer.

The crowd of Summerlake residents left the meeting, and Price spent almost 45 minutes addressing their questions and comments on the city hall steps.

Price said his client intends to build on the site and asking them to move it somewhere else was “non-starter” and not a compromise.

The property owners want to make sure it is a property that people would like to have in their community, he said.

“We’re going to work towards putting a store there that will make you all happy at the end of the day,” Price said.

The intent is to start construction as soon as possible, possibly within four to six weeks, he said.
Resident Bryan Chomyszak said to Price that if the store is built, a lot of people will be mad at Dollar General.

Chomyszak said the residents didn’t want the additional traffic a store will bring, and they believe the appearance of the store and signage will hurt their property values.

After speaking with Price, Chomyszak said he was more upset the planning commission didn’t let residents express their comments for the record in the meeting even if the comments couldn’t be considered for the vote.

“I think the citizens are disappointed that the Planning and Zoning Commission did not give us an opportunity to speak,” Chomyszak said.

Resident Tom Schneller said residents, including himself, hadn’t known the property in front of their subdivision was zoned for highway commercial.

“That’s the problem, it shouldn’t have been zoned commercial,” Schneller said



(Council members Scott Fleckinger, Robert Simon and Joseph Anderson did not answer or participate in ANY email conversations during this whole process.  A fact that should not be lost on the people of Summerlake next time they vote for city council members)  

Monday, September 19, 2011

Below are emails sent to all members of Alexandria City Council and Mayor Rachford concerning the proposed site of the store.


to

chofstetter@alexandriaky.org,
brachford@alexandriaky.org,
sgraus@alexandriaky.org,
bweber@alexandriaky.org,
sfleckinger@alexandriaky.org,
dhart@alexandriaky.org,
bob.simon@alexandriaky.org,
joe.anderson@alexandriaky.org


dateMon, Sep 19, 2011 at 10:18 PM
subjectPlanning and Zoning Meeting Tuesday August 20 7pm
mailed-bygmail.com


Hello members of City Council and Mayor Rachford, I would like to formally invite you to attend the planning and zoning meeting scheduled for tomorrow night at 7pm regarding the proposed Dollar General Store at the intersection of US27 and Summerlake Drive.  Please come and voice your opposition to the store. 

I must also say, that with the exception of Ms. Weber and Ms. Hofstetter who have been very good about communication, I am very disappointed in the lack of response from all other members of city council and the Mayor to the emails that I have sent.  I am hoping for a show of support from the council and the mayor at this meeting.  We are expecting a large crowd and hopefully several news and media outlets.  I have been in conversations with Mrs Tricia Macke from Fox 19 who said they will have a reporter present, and Chris Mayhew from the Alexandria Recorder who will be present as well.

Below is an email I sent to Chief Ward regarding the safety concerns at the store's proposed location. 

Please help us keep our community safe and beautiful.

Thank you,

Andy Schabell




Hello Chief Ward, I spoke with you at the August coffee with the mayor meeting regarding the proposed Dolllar General store at the intersection of US27 and Summerlake Drive in Alexandria.  From speaking with you I gathered that it is your duty as chief to investigate any potential traffic issues concerning all new buildings in Alexandria.  I have not had the opportunity to speak with you since our initial meeting and I am curious what you found. 

Ms. Hofstetter emailed myself and other concerned residents of the subdivision on Friday to let us know that the proposal for this store would be going in front of the Planning and Zoning board this Tuesday August 20th at 7pm. 

We have passed out flyers and spoke with many residents of the subdivision regarding the proposed store.  The overwhelming majority think that the store is going to present safety issues not only getting in and out of our subdivision, but also from increased traffic going past the store and "exploring" our subdivision.  I know that the police department has in the past received calls from residents concerned about speeding in our subdivision.  It is our position that increased traffic in and around our subdivision will lead to more instances of speeding. 

My sister just started driving this year and attends Bishop Brossart High School with your daughter.  She watches my children ages 10 and 4 after school 3 days a week while my wife and I are working.  It is already hard enough for her to get in and out of our subdivision safely without the added traffic that a Dollar General will bring.  If this store goes in, I will no longer be comfortable with her driving my children to our house.  If you lived in our subdivision I believe you would be very apprehensive of your daughter driving through all of the traffic that the store will create.  If there was a separate entrance to the store other than Summerlake's ONLY entrance, it would not be a big deal.  But from my conversations with Mr Jewell of the P&Z board, another entrance from US27 will not be allowed by the state of Kentucky.

Please consider this safety factor as if your own family resided in our subdivision, and please attend the meeting tomorrow night to voice your objection of this proposed store.

Thank you for your time,

And Schabell

Email sent to CEO of Dollar General

The following was sent to Richard Dreiling, CEO of Dollar General, as well as VP of Store Development Steve Brimner,  Monday September 19th.



Mr Dreiling, I just wanted to touch base quickly. 

We were told late Friday afternoon that the final plans for the store to be located at the front of Summerlake will be submitted tomorrow night, Tuesday September 20th at the Alexandria Planning and Zoning meeting.  Several residents hit the streets this weekend with flyers and numerous signs have gone up throughout the subdivision announcing the meeting and asking for attendance.  Overwhelmingly the residents of Summerlake have spoke out in opposition of your proposed store.  The main objections are not about the store itself or what it may or may not look like.  No, the main objection raised was that the store will share the ONLY entrance into our subdivision as it's only entrance.  The residents, many of whom have very young children, are very concerned over the increased traffic in and out of our subdivision.  There are also many residents with teenagers who are just beginning to drive, or will get their driver's license in the next couple of years.  They are concerned about the increased risk their children will face getting in and out of our subdivision.  Our blog about the store, http://nosummerlakedollargeneral.blogspot.com/ has over 500 views, and there are over 130 residents of the 90 home Summerlake Subdivision that have signed our online petition.

I am asking you today to please stop and think about our children's safety and consider another location for the store.    

Alexandria, KY is a growing community and we believe that a store such as this could do well if located at the right property.  There are numerous commercial properties located within 1/2 mile of this proposed store.  Two of those lots are located directly across US 27 next to an already well established farm equipment store.  The other sites located directly across the street also have 2 ways to access and exit the store, as well as having access to a stop light, and within walking distance of the Campbell County High School.  No doubt the students of Campbell County High School would find a store by their school very convenient and be big supporters of the store.  In addition to the students the people of Summerlake would be able to access the store easily.  The store would also be located on the side of the road that is traveling south, which is the direction most commuters coming home from work will be traveling.  If it is located where it is proposed, drivers on their way home would have to cross a 4 lane road twice without the aid of a stoplight just to get in and out of the store.  If it is put across the street it will be VERY easy for southbound drivers on their way home from jobs in Cincinnati to get in and out (just like the Dollar General store located about 3 miles down the road)  I can guarantee you that if you call your store manager of the store located 3 miles south of this proposed location they would tell you without a doubt much of it's success comes from them being on the southbound side of the road.

Mr Brimner has been outstanding to speak with during this process, and Michael the district manager has been very helpful as well.  The stores featured in my original email to you on August 21 have. for the most part, been taken care of and members of the communities located near those stores are very grateful.

Please reconsider this store and it's location.  I would be more than happy to discuss any questions you might have.  You can reach me at volffas@gmail.com

I appreciate your time,

Andy Schabell

Email sent to media outlets

The following email was sent to Cincinnati News channels 5, 9, 12 and 19 as well as the Cincinnati Enquirer.  We are hoping the media will help us in our fight.


Hello, the residents of the Summerlake Subdivision in Alexandria, KY located in Southern Campbell County, KY have been up in arms over a proposed Dollar General store to be located at the front of their subdivision.  The only way in and out of the store will be through the only entrance in and out of the subdivision.  Residents are concerned about increased traffic and the store becoming an eye sore.

Residents have amassed over 130 signatures on an online petition stating their opposition to the store.  The petition can be viewed here;  http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/nosummerlakedollargeneral/signatures?page=1

There is also a blog with over 400 pages views located here; http://nosummerlakedollargeneral.blogspot.com/

The residents will come face to face with a Dollar General representative and the Alexandria Planning and Zoning committee on Tuesday Night, September 20th, at 7pm at the Alexandria City Building. 

We would like to welcome your cameras to document this important meeting. 

Please contact Andy Schabell at volffas@gmail.com

Thank you for your consideration.


Saturday, September 17, 2011

The proposed Dollar General store will go up for a vote, Tuesday September 20th at 7pm at Alexandria City Hall.  This will be the ONLY meeting about the store.  If it is approved, the store will be built very soon.  Please attend if at all possible. 

Thanks,

Friday, September 2, 2011

Email from Dollar General site developer Susan Cox

I recieved the following email from the developer of the proposed Summerlake Dollar General store on September 1, 2011.  Please note the pictures that the developer, Ms. Cox was kind enough to send depicting what the Summerlake Dollar General store will look like.


dateThu, Sep 1, 2011 at 3:41 PM
subjectAlexandria KY



Andy:
I left you a voicemail and you are welcome to call me back if you have any questions.

I have attached the elevations, site plan and pictures of a job we are currently building in Henderson Kentucky that will be very similar to the Alexandria store.  If you get a chance – please drive by and take a look at the building. 

I also wanted to explain that as the developer and landlord, I choose to maintain my own properties – I use several different landscaping groups for initial landscaping and lawn maintenance.  I always tell the stores to call my office if they have any problems with the exterior or interior of the property and if you have any recommendations regarding someone I would be more than happy to contact them for a quote.

Hope this helps alleviate some of your concerns.



Susan Cox
Susan Cox Development, LLC
23 Weatherford Square
Jackson, TN  38305


This is what the front and back of the Summerlake store will look like.


And here is what the sides will look like.




Below are front and side pictures of a Dollar General store currently under construction in Henderson, KY.  This is very similar to the Dollar General that will be built at the front of our subdivision.  As you can see an all brick wrap is much better than buildings built with cinder block and metal siding.




Copy of email sent to Fischer Homes

 The following email was sent to Fischer Homes Representatives Friday September 2, 2011

Sent: Friday, September 2, 2011 7:58:43 PM
Subject: Concern with Dollar General Store in Maple Street Summerlake Subdivision


To Whom It May Concern:

The purpose of this e-mail is to address a major concern with an upcoming new development at the Maple Street Summerlake community in Alexandria Kentucky. As you may or may not be aware the land owner, Brandon Bray, who sits as an active HOA board member sold a piece of property at the entrance to the community to Dollar General Inc. What this means is that if all goes as planned, the new face of the Summerlake community will be a Dollar General store and not the beautiful homes and community that will sit adjacent and behind the building.

The group consensus from the home owners is that having Dollar General as the "anchor" to our subdivision will most likely decrease our property values. If our property values do decrease then it would be a safe assumption that the price points at which Fischer will be able to sell the remaining approximately 90 plots would also need to be adjusted in a downward position or would reduce the number of sales per year if Fischer chooses to keep the prices of these homes the same. Simple math indicates that if the average home sale in this community is $170,000 and price points have to be pushed down 10% to meet sales goals, this would equate to an approximate 1.53 million dollar hit on Fischer’s sales revenue over the next 5-10 years as you sell the remaining 90 lots. Keep in mind this information is based on estimates and not factual data but are intended to demonstrate an impact. In addition to the property value concern, there are also the implications of increased auto traffic around small children. I know that Fischer uses the “nice, safe, friendly community” as a key selling point.

This issue was addressed on 8/30/11 at the Annual HOA shareholders meeting where your sales coordinator, I believe his name is Brian Johnson, who also sits on the HOA board stated that having this Dollar General would be a positive impact to the community and would be a positive impact to Fischer Homes. He went as far as to say he was excited about the  increase foot traffic to the model home it would bring. I asked Mr. Johnson if Fischer had performed any type of due diligence or market analysis on how this transaction would affect Fischer’s future sales and he stated your company had not.

I am concerned why Fischer Homes has not taken a greater interest in this development and why your company would not conduct an analysis of the impact of this sale to protect your interests. If you have been unaware up to this point then I challenge you as the Executive Management Team to undertake this task and have this analysis performed in an expeditious manner as time is ticking. If my assumptions are correct or at least in the same ball park, I would then anticipate Fischer would want to use any leverage and influence it has on the land owner, Dollar General and the City of Alexandria to stop this from happening.

Last, to try to calm the homeowner’s fears, the land owner, Mr. Bray and other board members stated that this would be a nicer Dollar General and that promises have been made by Dollar General to keep the property in good condition. Yes, I am sure at first this will be a nicer than usual Dollar General but at the end of the day it is still a Dollar General. Is Fischer willing to bet their sales profits on promises and what if this Dollar General becomes unprofitable in 2-3 years and the store is closed. Who is going to deal with the now vacant eyesore? How will that affect future sales?

I do thank you for your time and consideration. I would appreciate a call back to discuss this further and I can be reached at ###-###-#### I have also attached a couple of links regarding Dollar General that would support the home owners concerns of the impact that Dollar General would have on our community. I encourage you to look at the pictures of other local Dollar General stores in the third link. Is this what you want potential customers to drive past as they go visit the model?








Respectfully Submitted,

Bryan C

Summerlake Dollar General in the news again.

The following article was published August 31, 2011  click here to view the original article.


Dollar General seeks OK in Alexandria
By Jeff McKinney • jmckinney@nky.com

August 31, 2011 ALEXANDRIA - Discount-store operator Dollar General is trying to open a new store here, but those plans have not been approved or finalized.

Carol Hofstetter, Alexandria's zoning administrator, said the company has submitted a site plan to the city's engineers to open a store at the intersection of Summerlake Drive and Alexandria Pike.

The store would be the first location in Alexandria for Goodlettsville, Tenn.,-based Dollar General.

Mayor Bill Rachford said a few residents of the Summerlake development have voiced concern about the store being in front of their subdivision. "Some of the residents are concerned with potential traffic congestion," Rachford said.

Hofstetter said the city's engineers have reviewed the plan and suggested that several changes be made. Hofstetter said the company must re-submit the plan and the city's engineers must OK the changes before the plan can be sent to city's Planning and Zoning Commission.

Dollar General spokesperson Emily Weiss said the store will be a free-standing location and be about 9,100 square feet. Weiss said a typical Dollar General employs six to 10 people.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Please sign our online petition.


Please sign our online petition! Simply click on the "Sign Petition" button below this post.

Your email information will not be sold or shared with anyone. You can sign the petition "Anonymous" if you prefer.

Thanks again for all of your support!








Thursday, August 25, 2011

Important updates!

We have had some major developments since my initial email went out to the CEO and Board of Directors on Sunday August 21st at 7:30pm. Within 2 hours I received a call from Michael, the District Manager in charge of the stores featured in my blog. He said he was heading to the stores to get them up to company standards and he appreciated my call. I thought that might be the last I heard from Dollar General, but I was impressed that the email had went to the right person and it had enough of an impact for them to call me at 9:30pm on a Sunday night.

Monday night just about the time I walked in the front door, our home phone was ringing. It was John Jewell, Chairman of the Planning and Zoning Commission for the City of Alexandria. Mr. Jewell was very nice, but also very specific. He said that my suggestion of showing a power point presentation at the planning and zoning (P&Z) meeting was not appropriate. He also said that the P&Z meeting that might eventually happen to discuss the store was not the place for anyone to stand up and give their opinion either for or against the store. He said if the discussion was about changing the zoning of a piece of land from residential to highway commercial to allow Dollar General to build, then we would have a chance at keeping them from building. However, since the site has been zoned highway commercial since before the first house in Summerlake was built, there was nothing, short of purchasing the property ourselves, that we could do to prevent Dollar General from building on the land. He said that the plans were originally submitted to the city engineers who had reviewed the plans and made suggestions for changes. Dollar General(DG) now has to give their amended changes back to the engineers who will either send them back to DG for additional changes, or approve the changes. If they approve the changes, the site plan will be added to the docket for the very next P&Z meeting. At that time, the P&Z's job is really just administrative, and as long as everything proposed is legal, the plan will be given the OK. He did mention however that the whole entrance of Summerlake was going to need to be redesigned. He said that it will be very similar to the entrance's by the Speedway on US 27 (near the old Thriftway, and across from Little Red Schoolhouse) and the entrance to Walgreens across from Wal-Mart. It will have 2 dedicated lanes coming in, one that will be left turn only to get into Dollar General, and one that will go straight ahead into the subdivision. He said there will also be 2 lanes going out, one dedicated left turn only, and one dedicated right turn only. He said that the 1st island you come to in the subdivision will be torn out and replaced with a different one. I asked him if my tax dollars were going to pay for all of this work and he assured me the cost would be covered by the developer. I also asked him if they were going to get a separate entrance and exit from and onto US 27 like Walgreens and Speedway, but he said no, the state of Kentucky will not allow any "additional curbage" that close to the intersection of US 27. So the only way in and out of the Dollar General will also be the only way in and out of Summerlake Drive. He assured me that the City of Alexandria has rules and laws governing the condition of the stores in their city, and that Dollar General would be held to the same high standards as the rest of the businesses now operating in the city. He did mention however that most of the zoning enforcement that is done is done as a direct result of complaints. So if we see something in the future that we don't like, the best way to take action is to email the city Zoning Administrator Carol Hofstetter (who I have dealt with on other matters of abandon homes in our neighborhood, and I must say she has always been very prompt and courteous in her responses to my emails). He concluded by saying that he would allow one member of our community (me) a chance to address the P&Z commission so that our sentiments can go on record as opposing the site. But he made it very clear that it would not influence the outcome of the commission's ruling. And that no more than one person will be allowed to speak in opposition of the site since in his words, "that is not the time or place" to speak out. He also said that he would personally address the Dollar General representative and let them know what kind of opposition he has encountered with the store and remind the Dollar General store rep. that they better "mind their P's and Q's" or they will have numerous complaints filed against them. Mr. Jewell said that he empathizes with our community, but beyond that, there is nothing that he can do for us. I thanked him for his time and hung up the phone feeling slightly defeated, but also more determined than ever.

Tuesday afternoon I was busy in my office when my cell phone rang. Not knowing the number, and already deep in a conversation on my work phone, I let the call go to voice mail. Several minutes later when I checked the message I was surprised to hear that it was from Steve Brimner, Vice President of Store Operations and Store Development for Dollar General. He said that he appreciated my email and would like to speak with me. After work I called Steve's number and left a voice mail for him to call me back. 10 minutes later Steve called and we had a good conversation. He was very pleasant and mentioned several times how grateful he was for my email. He said that he wanted to assure me that Dollar General was now aware of the conditions of the stores in my email, and that maintenance crews had already been dispatched to the stores to get them in shape. He said that he was new to his job, having been at it less than 6 months, and he had not personally visited any of the stores. He wanted to assure me that the things I took pictures of at the other stores would be fixed, and never allowed to happen at the store in front of Summerlake. Before parting ways, I let him know the extreme opposition to building a store that they are facing from our neighborhood, and also how bad DG's reputation in our area is. I told him that although I could not speak for everyone, the only thing that I personally want is a good neighbor at the front of our subdivision. I told him that for the most part, the demographics of our subdivision were people between the ages of 30 and 45 who have worked hard all their life to build a home of their dreams and they have finally found a community good enough to raise children in, and probably retire in. The other demographic in our community seems to be 60+ year olds that have worked hard all of their lives and have finally found a place that they would like to retire. Either way, we are not a subdivision made up of renters and people that only plan on staying here for a year or two before moving on. Most of the residents that are here now will still be here 5, 10, or 15 years down the road. So if they upset us now, it's not something that will go away overnight. I told him that the I want the first guests to my house after the store opening to come to my house and tell me how wonderful the store at the front of my subdivision looks. I do not want people to come to my house and express disgust that there is just another ugly Dollar General store at the front of our subdivision. I asked him what kind of plans they have in mind for their store. He told me that it will be one of the nicest Dollar General's in the country. It will be brick siding, with a nice large awning, and a very nice fence to divide the neighborhood from the store. I told him that at this point I still have my doubts that they can run a nice store in front of our subdivision, but I hope more than anything that he will prove me wrong and stand behind his word to make our Dollar General the nicest one around.He then invited me to meet with the developer, review the plans for the store, and address any of my concerns to her. He said he would also like me to let him know what my concerns were and although he could not promise to accommodate my every wish, he would take any suggestions into consideration. I accepted his offer to meet with the developer, and I thanked him for his time. He once again said he appreciated my interest and my email, and that if I ever needed anything, be it one week or 5 years down the road, to not hesitate to call or email him any time.

At this time I have a tentative meeting with the developer, Ms Susan Cox, on Monday August 29th.

I have also been in touch with someone who works for the Cincinnati Enquirer and KY Post and there is potentially some interest in our story/plight against Dollar General.

I am happy to report over 300 individual hits to this website. Please pass it on to anyone you know that might be interested. Let's keep the heat turned up, together there is no telling what we might accomplish.

For more information, or to volunteer to help, please email me at volffas@gmail.com

Thank you!

Andy Schabell

Email sent to CEO and Board of Directors of Dollar General

The following email was sent Sun, Aug 21, 2011 at 7:12 PM and titled "Concerns over proposed Dollar General store, and the overall condition of Dollar General stores in Northern Kentucky"

It was sent to the following Dollar General executives:

Richard W. Dreiling; Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board
David M. Tehle; Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Steve Brimner; Vice President of Store Operations and Store Development
Todd Vasos; Division President and Chief Merchandising Officer
John W. Flanigan; Executive Vice President, Global Supply Chain
Susan S. Lanigan; Executive Vice President, General Counsel
Bob Ravener; Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer
Anita Elliott; Senior Vice President and Controller


Mr Dreiling,

My name is Andy Schabell, I live in Alexandria, Kentucky. I am very concerned about a Dollar General store that is being proposed at the entrance of my subdivision.

I know that you are busy so I will keep this brief. I would like to know if all Dollar General stores are operated like the ones I visited several weeks ago in Northern Kentucky. I saw stores that did not have dumpster corrals, stores that had been run into by vehicles and never repaired, stores that had so many potholes in their parking lots that patrons would park across the street and walk to the store, stores that had broken dumpster corrals, and stores that had trash lying on the ground all around them.

I have documented the stores that I visited on this website; http://nosummerlakedollargeneral.blogspot.com/

My question is; Is this the way the store you are going to build at the end of my subdivision is going to be? I would like to have some reassurance that not only will my store be different and well kept, but also that the stores pictured on my website will be thoroughly cleaned up and made to be good residents of their respective communities.

I would appreciate a response to my question, either via email at volffas@gmail.com, or you can call me at ***-***-****.

Thank you for your time,

Andy Schabell

The People have spoken

Thank you for all of the words of encouragement to keep up the fight. We had a very successful flyer campaign thanks to Brad and Lisa Wolf. More residents are now aware of what is going on and they want to help out. I have had numerous emails asking to be added to the list for updates, but not one single email in favor of Dollar General.

Some things that have been said;

Please include me in any future e-mails regarding this matter. I am highly opposed to a Dollar General being the "face" of our neighborhood as well. I think we can all safely say that is not the image that we were purchasing when we bought our homes. Dollar General is fine for Newport and Silver Grove, but not for this specific portion of land. I am sure that a Dollar General did not affect the property values where they are located in Newport or Silver Grove because there is not a subdivision neighboring either of those store locations. Also, we take pride in knowing the faces that we see daily in our neighborhood and knowing that our children are safe to run through their neighborhood home. With a Dollar General store as our neighbor we compromise our capability of being able to ensure that are children are safe on the playground, at the fishing lakes and walking trails, especially if they like walking the trail that begins at the playground and come out right at the entrance to the front of the neighborhood where the Dollar General would be. Not to be blunt or abrasive, but that would be an open invitation to predators to go back through our walking trail straight from a public lot directly into our children's playground. No child could be guaranteed the level of safety as we know it now. This is our home and we must protect and preserve what is ours so it is not conformed and degraded to fit the needs of a business.



Thank you for what you are doing in bringing about an awareness to our community of the downfalls of the proposed Dollar General near the entrance of our subdivision. You can count me and my wife "in" with a petition to city council to stop the process. Not only would this be a problem of aesthetics and reduction in property values for nearby homes, but also has the potential to hinder traffic flow at the entrance into our neighborhood.


We will keep up the fight!

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Please join us in opposing Dollar General at their proposed location at US27 and Summerlake Drive

On Friday August 5th 2011, the Summerlake Subdivision in Alexandria, KY was rocked by a report by the Cincinnati Enquirer that Dollar General had entered the initial process of planning a store at the front of their subdivision. The article can be found here; http://cincinnati.com/blogs/campbellcountyconnects/2011/08/05/dollar-general-coming-to-alexandria/

Immediately Summerlake home owners started communicating the news with each other via social networking and old fashioned word of mouth. The residents were very unhappy to find out that a store with the reputation of being messy both on the inside and out was planning on opening at the entrance to their subdivision.

The same night as the article was published a long and detailed email was sent to all members of the Alexandria city council, the planning and zoning administrator, and the Mayor. On the morning of August 6th I met with the Mayor, police chief, and city council members face to face at the monthly "Coffee with the Mayor" at the Alexandria city building. At that time they were unaware of the article, or what Dollar General was proposing.

On the evening of Monday August 9th I decided to take a drive to nearby Dollar General stores in Northern Kentucky. What I saw absolutely scared me to death!

Warning, the following pictures may make you sick to your stomach.... Reminder, all photos were taken on one night without any staging or set ups at all. These photos have not be edited or enhanced in any way. The trash and clutter that you will see at these stores is REAL.

For more information on helping stand up and be heard opposing this store please contact Andy Schabell at volffas@gmail.com





I first visited the Dollar General in Silver Grove, KY. This store is very new and overall pretty clean. However as soon as I pulled into the entrance I noticed a cart used for keeping cardboard tipped over and laying in mud with cardboard scattered on the ground. Upon closer inspection it was easy to see that the cart had been laying on it's side for several days without anyone bothering to pickup it up. I had a premonition that if this store was less than a month old and already had garbage scattered around it, the other stores were really going to be bad. I would find out soon enough how right I was.

Here is the Silver Grove, KY store from the front, if you look to the right of the store and towards the back you can see the rack tipped over.




Here are some close pictures of the rack tipped over. Also notice the garbage bag outside the delivery door. There is no dumpster corral on site, and no dumpster on site, even though the store is operating daily.




Pictures from Dollar General store, Falmouth, KY.

Grass not cut, sign has all kinds of straps and zip ties from previous ads.



Rusty racks with old cardboard in them, broken carts on side of building near the front of the store.






Old damage to side of building left unfixed.



Potholes all over in parking lot.



Next stop Crittenden, KY Dollar General.

As soon as you pull in the parking lot you can see that there are no gates on front of the dumpster corral, and there is trash everywhere inside of the corral.







Grass not cut, parking lot not maintained.



More racks with soggy cardboard and two bags of trash next to the racks.



Next up Dollar General Store Burlington, KY. The first thing you see when you pull in is the Dollar General sign with weeds growing out of control around it.

This store also had the worst corral of all of them. Trash everywhere. Wood corral that has long ago stopped functioning. The wood is falling apart, the hinges are bent. No attempt at all made to put trash into dumpster.

















More racks... AND they didn't even bother to make sure the soggy cardboard was in the racks.






Next was the newer Dollar General on Dixie Highway in Florence. This is obviously a newer store, and was the best overall condition of all of the stores that I visited. It was starting to rain and almost 8pm on a Monday night, but the store was still crowded. The corral had cinder block sides and wood gates. However, they still have the racks with soggy cardboard sitting outside of the corral. They did make an effort to hide the heating and air conditioning units on the side with evergreens, but there were not enough evergreens, and they were not tall enough.
















Next stop, Dollar General, Cave Run Road, Erlanger, KY.

Notice they don't even have a corral. There was trash laying next to the dumpster, skids along the side of the building, and old damage to the building that has not been fixed. As I was leaving a car pulled up to the dumpster and unloaded their personal garbage into the dumpster. I realize this is not Dollar General's fault, but having open dumpsters in parking lots does help facilitate these kind of actions.


















Having seen enough, I called it a night. Hopefully these pictures will help spread the word on how terrible Dollar General could be as a neighbor. In our current economy, I strongly encourage growth and development, but we cannot go backwards in the name of progress. The city of Alexandria, and the fine people of Summerlake Subdivision have spent years making our city and our subdivision one of the best places to live. We cannot have our image ruined by a company that makes the bottom dollar the top priority and does not appear to worry about maintaining a good image for the community they operate in.



For more information on helping stand up and be heard opposing this store please contact Andy Schabell at volffas@gmail.com



Thank you.



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