Sears to have significant impact on New Brunswickers, retail analyst says - Action News
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New Brunswick

Sears to have significant impact on New Brunswickers, retail analyst says

Retail analyst says closure of Sears stores in Saint John and Bathurst will have significant impact on New Brunswickers.

Sears announced on Thursday it would be closing 2 stores in Saint John and Bathurst

The closure came as a surprise to the Place Bathurst Mall, which invested millions in renovations this year. (Bridget Yard/CBC)

The decision by Sears Canada to close its stores in Saint John and Bathurst is expected to have significantimpact on people across the province, according to a retail analyst.

On Thursday, Sears Canada announced theclosure oftwo New Brunswick stores as part of a national restructuring plan that will close 59 stores and lay off 2,900 workers.

"We're going to see impact on two communities in New Brunswick and maybe a little bit more, given New Brunswick is also home to a call centre for Sears,"saidJim Danahy, thepresident of Customerlab, which consults with retail firms.

Danahysaidthe closure means less selection for local shoppers,the loss of jobs and the province's local tax base.

It will also haveimpact on any New Brunswick vendors who could be selling products to Sears,who have "likely shipped their goods and haven't been paid yet."

Sears has about 100 employees at theSaint John store and another 46 in Bathurst, most of which are part time.

The other New Brunswick stores, in Fredericton and Moncton, are not among the20 full-time Sears locations across the country that will be shut down.

"There's no certainty to what could be happening going forward for NewBrunswickerswho work for one or more of the Sears businesses," he said.

Problems could have been prevented

Sears, a longtime anchor of the McAllister Place mall in east Saint John, will close. A timeline for the closure has not been set.
Danahy said the announcement came quickly but a lot of people have seen this coming for years.

"The ownership group of Sears, they've managed to keep this company on life support for far longer than anybody hasevery predicted," he said.

"Once you lose the confidence of the lenders and investors that support a company, it goes down very quickly."

Danahy said the strugglecould have been prevented back in 2005, when a hedge fund leader,Edward Lampert, bought the U.S. company, which also controls the Canadian company.

"Almost immediately, they started doingthings like share buy backs, which is a way of making sure the shareholder's value is improved," he said.

"But all the money from doing that goes into the pockets of the owners, it doesn't go into improving the company in any way or making it more competitive against Walmart and Amazon."

He said while Sears was busy improving shareholder value,companies like Hudson'sBay andWalmartwere committed to making money from being retailers,plowing money into modernizing storesand creating more of an Internet presence.

Call centre questions

The New Brunswick government announced up to $8.6 million in financial assistance to Sears to create call-centre jobs in Saint John and Edmundston. In an email to CBC News, Sears spokesperson Joel Shaffer said, "nothing is happening to those call centres" and "hiring targets remain intact." (CBC)
In January, Premier Brian Gallant announced the province will provide up to $8.6 million in financial assistance to Sears Canada for it to create a call centre with 350 jobs in Saint John and a 180-job call centre inEdmundston.

Danahysaid some of these call centres could be free-standing businesses and sold off to other companies, allowing them to continue providingnational services.

"It's not just there to serve the [four] stores," he said.

"It's conceivable that somebody else could buy that business and happily continue to run it."

Joel Shaffer, a Sears spokesperson, said in an email on Thursday to CBC News that"nothing is happening to those call centres"and "hiring targets remain intact."

With files from Information Morning Fredericton