HomeMy WebLinkAboutagenda.council.worksession.20080701MEMORANDUM
TO: Mayor and City Council
FROM: Ben Gagnon, Special Projects Planner ~~
THRU: Chris Bendon, Director, Community Development~~„
DATE OF MEMO: June 27, 2008
MEETING DATE: July 1, 2008
RE: Succession Planning /Community-Owned Businesses
REQUEST OF COUNCIL: There is no request for Council action at this work session.
BACKGROUND: This is a continuation of staff and consultant aided research on the
subject of Aspen's commercial mix.
DISCUSSION: Similaz to the June 24 work session, staff is bringing the results of
various reseazch efforts to the attention of the City Council as -essentially - "food for
thought." Our research efforts are not complete, but enough relevant information has
been developed to bring to Council's attention as we continue forward with this complex
topic.
Although there is more reseazch and investigation to conduct, staff has drawn some
preliminazy conclusions on certain topics under the heading of commercial mix. Staff
believes the community and Council is familiar with the following scenario: A business
owner and property owner has long ago paid off his or her mortgage and is enjoying
running their business and the company of their longtime friends and patrons. Ultimately,
this person decides to sell for the kind of astronomical prices that are prevalent in the
Aspen market. Because of the high purchase price, the new buyer can't get enough
income from the previous use and decides to redevelop and/or change the use to one that
generates higher revenues. Thus disappeazs the previous use.
Today, staff's overriding concern is that certain businesses that fall under the category of
"sundries" -- providing necessities such as pharmaceuticals -- could be subject to this
scenazio at almost any time. Staff believes it would be irresponsible not to take steps to
meet this challenge head-on, before we are in the less enviable position of reacting to it.
Consultant Mark White will be talking on July 1 about the concept of "succession
planning," under which a representative of the City could approach various business
owners and property owners to inquire about their future long-term plans and suggest
various options for maintaining a use. Mr. White will be talking about some of these
succession planning options, including community-owned stores. He will walk Council
through a number of examples of successful community-owned stores in different types
of towns across the country.
One attraction of community-owned businesses is that it can bring the community to an
interesting decision point regarding what it really wants - an exercise that could yield
some creative and innovative ideas for a new business. At the same time, a show of proof
is required - a demonstration of financial commitment within the community - to
ultimately open the doors and make a go of it.
Staff is interested in this approach largely because it begins to address perhaps the most
critical concern with regard to commercial mix, and that is the potential loss of what
might be called "critical use" businesses. At the same time, this approach requires
workable and creative solutions to maintaining such uses -recognizing that the business
owner/property owner is going to move on at some point.
With regard to solving such problems through top-down regulation, staff cannot find a
remotely legal regulatory solution that requires a certain use to remain at a certain
property. Even if such a regulation were available, staff believes that such apunitive -
almost certainly dramatic downzoning -would be fundamentally unfair to a
business/property owner who has served the community's basic needs, and would be an
unacceptable solution to the community.
On the other hand, the potential for commercial mitigation is an option that staff
continues to explore. Establishing space for local-serving uses could be part of a package
of solutions if Council finds the current commercial mix to be significantly unbalanced.
By July 1, staff will have generated abuild-out estimate for a potential future net increase
in commercial space in the downtown area. This estimate will provide a sense for how
much space might ultimately be gained for local-serving uses through a mitigation
requirement. At the same time, Mr. White will walk through how such a mitigation
program might be established, and the challenges involved -understanding that no
community in the United States has adopted a cormercial mitigation program at this
time.
Again, staff is not asking for any formal action from City Council, but always appreciates
feedback and direction as we work through this complex issue.
EXHIBIT A: Forum News: "Community-Owned Stores"
EXHIBIT B: Excerpts from report by Mark White
NATIONAL
HISTORIC PRESERVATION
COMMUNITY-OWNED STORES:
New Anchors for Older Main Streets
By Stacy Mitchell
Six years ago, Powell, Wyo. (population:
5,373), lost its only department store when
Stage, a regional chain, decided to shutter a
portion of its outlets. Residents suddenly
faced a 50-mile round trip to the big-box
stores in Cody or a 200-mile round trip to
the mall in Billings, Mont., to buy many
basic items.
An even bigger concern for town leaders
was the cascade of economic losses the
store's closure would likely set in motion.
Many feared that, as residents staffed trav-
eling to Cody or Billings for things they
used to buy at Stage, they would purchase
other goods there as well, including many
of the types of products sold by Powell's
remaining Main Street merchants. And
so the decline of Powell's tradirional down-
town would accelerate, echoing what is
happening in cities, towns, and villages
across the country.
Aker trying unsuccessfully to attract one of
the big store chains-all of which declined
due to the sparse population-Powell resi-
dents decided they would have to take mat-
ters into their own hands. They established
a community corporation, capitalized it by
selling shares to hundreds of local families,
and opened their own department store
called the Powell Mercantile.
The Merc, as [he store is known, has not
only filled a critical community need, it has
also turned a profit for five years running,
doubled in size, and injected new life into
the downtown. "It has been hugely impor-
tant to the vitality of our downtown," said
Kim Capron, executive director of the Pow-
ell Valley Chamber of Commerce. "The
Merc has become an anchor tenant for the
whole downtown. It's such a large draw."
The success of the Powell Mercantile has
inspired at least half a dozen other towns in
Wyoming, Montana, and Nevada-all too
small and remote to interest national or
regional chains-to open their own depart-
ment stores. The concept is now spreading
to the much more populous Northeast,
where local residents are seeking communiry-
focused alternatives to big-box retailers.
COMMUNITY CORPORATIONS
DEFINED
Community corporations are similar in
many respects to other publicly traded cor-
porations. Shareholders meet periodically
to vote on major matters and elect a board
of directors. The board, which is typically
made up of local civic and business leaders,
oversees the enterprise, while a store man-
ager handles day-to-day operations.
But unlike most stock corporations,
community-owned stores typically have
provisions in their charters and bylaws that
prevent out-of-state residents from buying
stock and limit how many shares any one
person may own. This ensures that the
business remains locally and democratically
controlled.
This democratic structure makes community
corporations fairly similar io cooperatives.
Indeed, fledgling community-owned depazt-
ment stores can look to the success of food
co-ops for inspiration. These consumer-
owned stores, which began to proliferate
in the 1960s, now number nearly 300 and
have annual sales of about $1 billion.
Cooperatives and community corporations
differ modestly in some respects. By law, the
activities of co-ops must be fairly closely
tied to meeting the needs of their member-
owners, whereas community corporations
may have somewhat broader missions.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
Published by National Trust Forum, a program of the Center for Preservation Leadership
In Bonaparte, Iowa, creation of the Township Stores by local residents was just the beginning of a
downtown revitalization effort. The smallest official Main Street community in the U.S., it earned a
Great American Main Street Award in 7996. Photo by Michael & Sherry Meek, Fly-by Photography.
COMMUNITY-OWNED STORES
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
Setting up as a community corporation
may also make raising sufficient start- ,
up capital a little easier, because a single
investor can buy multiple shares.
A TOOL FOR SAVING HISTORIC
MAIN STREETS
Essential to preserving our historic down-
towns is making sure that these districts
remain economically viable. Without healthy
businesses to occupy the storefronts, down-
towns not only cease to function in their
historic role as the center of community life,
but the buildings themselves invariably
deteriorate as property owners no longer
have a steady stream of income to pay for
maintenance and restoration.
Staying economically viable is particularly
challenging for small villages and town cen-
ters. It open requires residents to intervene
directly to keep their local businesses going.
Such was the case in Bonaparte, Iowa
(population 458), when White's Shopping
Center, a major downtown retailer, closed
its doors 22 years ago. For more than three
decades, White's had sold most of the
necessities of life, from groceries and
clothing to hardware and appliances.
Four residents decided to take action. They
formed a nonprofit corporation, Township
Stores Inc., and raised over $100,000 in
capital by selling $2,000 shares to more
than SO local residents. They used the
capital to renovate the five 19th-century
buildings that White's had occupied and
launched several new businesses, including
a grocery store and a hardware store.
Inspired by Township Stores, the community
embarked on a full-scale downtown revital-
ization program, based on the Main Street
Four-Point Approach® developed by the
National Trust for Historic Preservation.
Today the grocery store is still operating
and, thanks to the revitalization effort the
Township Stores project sparked, Bonaparte
is still firmly on the map.
In Vermont and New Hampshire, several
longstanding general stores have likewise
been saved by community investment.
When the general store and lunchtime gath-
ering spot in Hebron, N.H., closed in 1997,
more than half of the village's 400 residents
chipped in to collectively buy the 1940s
building and lease it to new operators. In
the New Hampshire town of Harrisville,
the village store, dating from 1838, was
purchased in 2000 by the nonprofit Historic
Harrisville, Inc., renovated, and leased.
IDEA TAKES OFF IN THE WEST
Community ownership has received more
attention in recent years wich the opening of
more than half a dozen community-owned
department stores. While community own-
ership had previously been used to save
existing businesses, these new department
stores were all started from scratch to fill
particular local needs and provide a strong
anchor for downtown shopping.
Harrisville General Store, N.H. Photo courtesy of
Historic Harrisville, Inc.
Among the best known is the Powell Merc,
which has been featured in several national
news stories. But it was directly inspired
by another one. As town leaders were strug-
gling to address the loss of Stage, they
learned about an enterprise called Little
Muddy Dry Goods 450 miles away in Plen-
tywood, Mont. This small-town department
store had been launched by a group of resi-
dents who had each put up $10,000 in capi-
tal. Acontingent of business and civic
leaders from Powell visited Plentywood and
became convinced that the same model
could work in Powell.
When they returned, they formed a board,
incorporated, and filed papers with the state
to offer stock in the Powell Mercantile.
Shares were priced at $500, much lower
than in Plentywood, with the hope that a
larger number of people would invest.
Residents responded enthusiastically.
Within months, the enterprise sold more
than 800 shares, generating $400,000 in
capital. About a year later, the Merc opened
its doors in the 7,000-square-foot storefront
previously occupied by Stage.
The store has been a huge success. I[ offers
customers good service and the convenience
of shopping close to home. Prices are rela-
tively low as well, because the store has no
debt to service and no investors clamoring
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
ForumNews
RICHARD MOE
President
PETER H. BRINK
Senior Vice President, Programs
KATHERINE ADAMS
Director, Center for Preservation
Leadership
ELIZABETH BVRD WOOD
Program Manager, National Trust Forum
KERRI RUBMAN
Editor
RON WOODS
Business Manager
The National Trust for Historic Preservation, a private,
nonprofit membership organization, champions preser-
vation by provitling leatlership, education, advocacy,
and resources [o people working to preserve, improve,
antl enloy the places Iha[ matterto Nem. Its Washing-
ton, D.C., heatlquarters staff, six regional off¢es, antl 26
historic sites work with Me Trust's 270,000 members
and thousantls of local community groups in all 50
states. For more information, visit [he National Truses
websi[e a[ www.PreservationNa[ion.org.
Forum News: (ISSN 1534-2949; USPS Publication No.
013-063) is Published bimonthly by the Center for
Preservation Leadership a[ [he National Tmz[ for His-
toric Preservation, l]96 Massachusetts Avenue. N.W.,
Washington, O.C. 2D036 as a beneft of National Trust
Forum membership. forum members also receive four
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Annual tlues are $115. Periotlicals postage paitl at Wash-
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Send address changes to Forum News, 1]a5 Massachu-
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2008 National Trust for Historic Preservation in Ne
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bata, antl convey information of importance and of gen-
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Inclusion of makerial or product references does not
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toric Preservation. To obtain permission [o reprint any
part of [his publication please call (202) 588-fi063.
NATIONAL TRUST FOR
HISTORIC PRESERVATION
COMMUNITY-OWNED STORES
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2
Powell Mercantile, Wyo. Photo courtesy of the New
Rules Project, Institute for Local Self-Reliance.
for a high rate of return. Also key has been
the know-how of an experienced inventory
buyer who previously worked as a regional
manager for the Stage chain.
The Merc has been profitable since it opened
in 2002. In 2006 the store had profits of
$32,000 on $634,000 in sales. Rather than
pay dividends, shareholders have opted to
reinvest their earnings. In 2007 the Merc
bought the building next door, more than
doubling the size of the store.
By bringing more people downtown more
often, the Merc has boosted sales at other
downtown businesses. It's also given the
community a new sense of pride and self-
determination. Many residents refer to the
Merc simply as "our store."
"Because the community owns it, they really
support it," explained Capron. The Merc,
in turn, goes out of its way to support the
community, she noted. "They take the
lead and always participate in downtown
events. They are more than just a retailer.
They see it as their mission to be there for
the community.°
Sharon Earhart, one of the founders of the
Merc, believes the store has done more for
Powell than a chain could have. "I'm so
glad that when we asked the big stores to
come open up in our town, they said, `Are
you kidding? Get a life.' So we did! And a
much better one," she said.
The store's success has inspired several other
community-owned department stores in the
Rocky Mountain West. Residents of the
Wyoming towns of Worland and Torrington
have established their own stores: Washakie
Weay which opened in 2003, and Our
Clothing Store, started in 2005. When J.C.
Penney pulled out of remote Ely, Nev.,
residents capitalized their own store with
nearly $500,000 in stock shares, priced at
$500 apiece. The Garnet Mercantile opened
in 2004 in the same 1910 building, whose
facade now sports the Art Deco look of the
town's heyday. In Livingston, Mont., the
Livingston Mercantile, owned by 250 local
shareholders, celebrated its first year in
business in December 2007.
All these stores now serve as major down-
town anchors, keeping residents shopping
locally. The stores have joined together to
form a buying cooperative to reduce costs
by buying some goods in bulk.
EAST COAST CATCHING ON
In isolated Western towns, community-
owned stores have provided an antidote to
a sudden dearth of staple goods within a
reasonable distance. In the East, community-
owned stores are catching on less out of
dire necessity and more as a sought-after
alternative to big boxes.
In 2006 a grassroots group in Saranac Lake,
N.Y., managed to rally residents and head
off construction of a Wal-Mart superstore.
But they knew that it would be a short-lived
victory unless they found a way to fill a
local need for more affordable shopping
options. As long as this gap remained,
Wal-Mart would eventually return and be
welcomed by the community.
The group launched the Saranac Lake Com-
munity Store to provide low-cost clothing,
shoes, linens, craft items, and baby goods.
Shares went on sale to the public in July
2007, and by January 2008 the venture had
attained nearly 50 percent of its goal of
$500,000 in start-up capital.
Residents of Greenfield, Mass., have also
been working to establish acommunity-
owned store. The initiative was prompted
in part by the closure of Ames, a regional
chain of discount department stores, which
leh a gap in the availability of low-priced
goods. Unlike isolated towns in [he West,
Greenfield has four Wal-Mart stores within
about 20 miles. Several years ago, residents
voted against Wal-Mart's application to
open in town. Mercantile advocates hope
that, by launching aloes-priced alternative,
they can prevent further incursion by chains
and maintain the vitality of Greenfield's
downtown and homegrown businesses.
With the support of grants from the USDA
Rural Business Enterprise program and the
Greenfield RedevelopmenrAuthority, and
help from the Franklin County Community
Development Corporation, a steering
committee spent three years laying the
groundwork for the enterprise. They
prepared a detailed business plan, incorpo-
rated, and formed a board of directors
made up of bankers, attorneys, civic
leaders, and other community members.
In 2007 they began selling shares in the
Greenfield Mercantile, hoping to raise
$600,000. The planned store may make
use of a 19th-century brick building down-
town recently vacated by a furniture store.
Starting acommunity-owned store is no
easy task. It requires months of dedica[ed
work from volunteers and a significant
financial investment from many local
families. It's certainly harder to do than
simply succumbing to more big-box sprawl.
But, as the founders and owners of these
stores attest, they yield dividends that go
far beyond shopping options and stock
earnings. They bring people together
around a common enterprise. They fill
vacant storefronts, both directly and
indirectly, that would otherwise multiply
on Main Streets. They contribute [o a more
robust local economy and a greater sense
of community self-reliance.
Stacy Mitchell is a senior researcher with the
New Rules Project, a program of the Institute for
Local Self-Reliance. Her book, Big-Box Swindle:
The True Cost of Mega-Retailers and the Fight
for America's Independent Businesses, was
recently named one of the top ten business
books of the year by the American Library
Association's Booklist.
For further information, see How to Launch a
Community-Owned Store at www.bigboxtoolkit.
com/images/pdf/com m u n ity_store_howto. pdf.
To learn more about the New Rules Project's
efforts to support local businesses, and to sign
up for its a-mail Hometown Advantage Bulletin,
go to www.newrules.org/retail.
NATIONAL TRUST FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION'
Exhibit B
Excerpts from Report by Consultant Mark White
4 Fiscal or Public-Private Partnership Tools
4.1 Community Enterprise
Community enterprises involve direct investment in and ownership of the enterprise by
the affected community. A notable example is the National Football League's Green Bay
Packers. The Packers are a business corporationz whose shares are publicly traded and
owned principally by its fans. The entity is a publicly owned, non-profit corporation
with 4,750,934 shares of stock that are owned by 112,015 stockholders. Stock shares
include voting rights, but the redemption price is minimal. Stock does not pay
dividends, does not appreciate in value, and does not carry season ticket privileges.
The articles of incorporation prohibit any person from owning more than 200,000
shares.3 This arrangement keeps the team under the control of its fans, rather than a
unified ownership entity.
This type of cooperative arrangement can also apply to locally serving businesses.
Citizens in several western states have banded together to open community owned
stores in response to the closing of existing stores, to fill the local shopping needs of
residents. Others, such as the Willey Street Co-op in Madison, Wisconsin, simply
provide food at affordable prices to its owners. The Willey Street Co-op has operated
for 35 years in a traditional, compact neighborhood where most customers arrive on
June 25, 2008
City of Aspen ~ Commercial Mix Strategies
foot or bicycle. Others, such as the Powell Mercantile in Powell, Wyoming, were a
response to an urgent community need for basic goods and services in a rural location.
Local residents become shareholders, meet periodically to vote on store issues, provide
local civic and business leaders who oversee the community store, and forego dividends
and appreciation in exchange for providing a community asset. These stores can
provide a variety of products, such as clothing, shoes, furniture, and household items.
There are many ways td structure a community enterprise a
Consumer A cooperative is an enterprise that is owned by its members (such
cooperatives as retail merchants), where each member has an equal say in
decisionmaking and receives a share of any profits generated.s
The International Cooperative Association (ICA) defines a
cooperative as an autonomous association of persons united
voluntarily to meet their common economic, social, and cultural
needs and aspirations through ajointly-owned and
democratically-controlled enterprise.b A cooperative operates
under 7 general principles:
i. Voluntary, Open Membership: Open to all without gender, social, racial,
political, or religious discrimination.
2. Democratic Member Control: One member, one vote.
3. Member Economic Participation: Members contribute equitably to, and
democratically control, the capital of the cooperative. The economic
benefits of a cooperative operation are returned to the members,
reinvested in the co-op, or used to provide member services.
4. Autonomy and Independence: Cooperatives are autonomous, self-help
organizations controlled by their members.
s. Education, Training and Information: Cooperatives provide education and
training for members so they can contribute effectively to the
development of their cooperatives. They inform the general public about
the nature and benefits of cooperation.
6. Cooperation Among Cooperatives: Cooperatives serve their members
most effectively and strengthen the cooperative movement by working
together through local, regional, national and international structures.
7. Concern For The Community: While focusing on member needs,
cooperatives work for the sustainable development of their communities
through policies accepted by their members.
A cooperative allows independent businesses to remain
June 25, 2008
City of Aspen ~ Commercial Mix Strategies
competitive with national retailers by giving small merchants
greater purchasing power allowing them to lower the cost of
goods through volume buying and purchasing. Coops are often
able to negotiate directly with manufacturers. Coops can also
provide additional advantages to independent businesses
including national advertising, brand identity, expert marketing
and business advice. These have a long history in food retailing.
A consumer cooperative is distinguishable from a membership
cooperative. Membership coops include hardware alliances and
grocery alliances such as the Independent Grocers Alliance (IGA).
Coop members can vary widely in their operations and can
individually tailor their own inventory. Independent retailers can
form trade associations to cooperatively market, purchase, and
engage in other joint ventures. One example in Boulder, Colorado
is the Boulder Independent Business Alliance that was created in
1998 and now represents more than 125 businesses in the City.
The role of the alliance is to represent independent businesses in
public policy, promote members through joint advertising, and
marketing, member to member discounts such as reduced rates
on advertising though locally run media outlets, and future
benefits such as pooled insurance programs and the formation of
a community investment fund.
Community Owned Under this option, the community provides start-up capital for a
Business business that is owned and operated by a local entrepreneur. For
example, local residents could capitalize a business, with modest
interest rates or discounts.
Community These are capitalized through stock shares sold to local residents.
Corporations The bylaws typically stipulate that stockholders must live in the
- state. Community corporations are run by an elected board of
directors. Investors generally seek community benefits rather
than financial gains.
Owner Occupancy Local retailers can ensure a stable location at a reasonable price if
by Private they buy their building or store. Cities can encourage this through
Corporations or property tax or income tax incentives, orlow-interest loan funds
Individuals dedicated to small business owners.
Commercial Land A commercial land trust (CLT) borrows from the community land
Trusts (CLTs) trust concept that has been applied to affordable housing. In the
June 25, 2008
City of Aspen ~ Commercial Mix Strategies
context of affordable housing, a land trust is a private non-profit
corporation created to acquire and hold land for the benefit of a
community and provide secure affordable access to land and
housing for community residents.$ A CLT can effectively establish
and maintain affordable housing and the same model could be
used for commercial buildings with the requirement that buyers
or lessees be independent businesses. Commercial Land Trusts
are funded mostly by CDBG funds.
Publicly Owned The city itself could buy a commercial building and contract for its
Space management with the stipulation that the space be leased only to
businesses that serve community needs. Rents should be stable
and below market.
Identify Spill-Over The City can identify underutilized commercial districts and focus
Space revitalization efforts there to make the district a viable location
for localstores9
Most of these enterprises are the product of local, private civic cooperation. These
efforts do not typically involve local government. However, the City could play a role by
becoming a shareholder, providing space, writing down land costs, offering grants or
low-interest loans, or otherwise offsetting startup and maintenance costs. It could also
provide matching grants orinvestments -for example, a pledge to buy a given number
of shares for every designated increment of shares that are sold on the open market.
The City could also establish an economic development department or dedicated staff
to assist with ongoing management.
A community enterprise raises a number of institutional and operational issues. These
include:
/ Ownership -many cooperatives assign a vote to each share. Others offer shares in
blocks or other arrangements in an attempt to expand the sale of shares.10 Most
cooperatives control either the absolute number or percent of shares that an
individual investor can hold.
/ Share Price. Higher prices yield more startup revenue if the market can support it,
while lower prices could attract more investors. Most community owned
cooperatives have priced their shares $100-500. The Willey Street Co-op prices its
shares at $56, and allows this amount to be paid over time. It relies principally on
product sales for ongoing revenues.
June 25, 2008
City of Aspen ~ Commercial Mix Strategies
/ Benefits of Ownership. Most community owned stores limit or deny dividends and
price appreciation for shareholders because the investment is seen as a civic benefit.
This also limits decisions that are motivated by solely by profit rather than the wider
public interest. Instead, ownership provides voting rights and access to information,
such as newsletters.
/ Shareholder Location. A cooperative could limit the sale of shares to local
residents, in order to ensure that the operation and management is consistent with
local needs. However, most community owned cooperatives have sold their shares
on a statewide basis, which expands the universe of investors.
/ Management. With most community owned stores, management is selected by
shareholders.
The following table summarizes the characteristics of several community owned
businesses that provide locally serving products:
Business Location Population Produce Started Structure Own or Annual Employees Store size r
(2000) Rent? Sales
Little Plenrywood, 2,061 Clothing, 1999 LLC rent $240,000 5 6,000
Muddy Dry MT yarn, managed by ''
Goods, LLC bedding, members
shoes, gift
items,
jewelry
Orono Orono, ME 9,112 Pharmacy 1999 Business Own ~ "- ~~~!^+
Community Corporation (initially
rented)
Pharmary
Powell Powell, WY 5,373 Department 2001 Profit Own $560,000 10 it 7,SDD
Mercantile store Corporation (initially
(the rented)
"Merc")
Garnet Ely, NV 4,041 Department 2004 Corporation Own 7 _ 30,OD0
Mercantile store,
furnfture
Wazhakie Worland, 5,250 Clothing 2002 Profit - 12,000 ;
Wear WY Corporation
Lune 25, 2008