Maine Town Votes to Ban Chain Stores

Story by Margaret Foster / Nov. 9, 2005

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You won't find a fast-food chain in Ogunquit,
and now you never will. (Ogunquit Rentals)
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Yesterday voters in Ogunquit, Maine, passed an ordinance
that bans chain stores in their four-square-mile coastal town.
About 79 percent of voters in the town of 1,300 supported the
measure.
"I'm thrilled that so many people actually
voted. Ogunquit is pristine, and I think we have the responsibility
to keep it that way, and apparently so do 500 other people in
town," says resident Mary Breen, who owns a local bakery.
Last spring, when Breen heard that a Dunkin Donuts
might move into town, she rolled into action, gathering enough
signatures on a petition to put the item on the Nov. 8 ballot.
"I've lived here all my life and thought there already was
this ordinance [against chain stores]."
Ogunquit, which already had a law against drive-through
restaurants, is the second town in Maine to adopt such a ban.
Last year, voters in adjacent York passed a similar law to prevent
chain stores from opening. More than a dozen towns in the country
have bans against chain stores.
Nearby Freeport has a design ordinance that forces
corporations like McDonald's to fit into the historic neighborhood,
but that's not enough, Breen says.
"You can make it look like a quaint little
building, but it's still a business that's taking money away from
local people, and it's not unique," Breen says. "Everywhere
you go, no matter where you go, everything looks the same."
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