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businesses will thrive and others fail. Laws exist outside of the zoning and land use system to <br />control competition that society deems unfair: anti-trust laws, truth-in-labeling laws, and the like. <br />The land use system is not supposed to limit competition to favor certain businesses against ' <br />others. It is a legitimate use of the land use and zoning powers to establish preferred locations <br />for businesses, and to prevent businesses from getting started in undesireable locations. For <br />example, it is a perfectly legitimate use of zoning power for a community that is trying to preserve <br />and enhance an existing downtown business core to use zoning to prevent big-box mercharrts <br />from building at a highway crossroads away from the downtown, so that the downtown remains <br />the primary commercial cemer. This is the type of zoning battle that has been fought in many <br />communities against big retailers such as Wal-Mart, but it should be based on a policy about the <br />use of land, and the proper location for businesses, not the belief that one group of business <br />owners aze more deserving than another. Other laws set the requirements for wages, hours, and <br />health care that corporations must meet. Zoning and other land use laws do not set these <br />standazds. <br />Given these general principles, the Planning Director cannot give a favorable <br />recommendation to an ordinance that would ban superstores everywhere on the island. The <br />combination of a lazge department store with a section that sells food, under the same roof and <br />with the same ownership, cannot be said to be a bad thing in itself and under all circumstances. It <br />is simply a different form of retail enterprise. It is not something like an illegal drug lab, a casino, <br />or a brothel that a community may ban because it believes it is a harmful activity in itself. <br />An island-wide ban could have the pazadoxical effect of creating a monopoly for Wal- <br />Mart in the "superstore" category, given that Wal-Mart will apparently build a superstore on <br />DHI-II, property. Unless DHHI. leases another site to a superstore competitor, that would be the <br />only site where a superstore could be built on the island if this ban is enacted. <br />There is reason to be concerned about the location of superstores. They aze typically very <br />lazge in comparison with other retail businesses and can attract very lazge traffic volumes to a <br />particular area. One particulaz concern is that a superstore can bring traffic from a large region to <br />an azea that may not have been planned to be a regional commercial center. Some of our MCX <br />zoned areas, for example, may have been planned with the idea that they would have mixed <br />-6- <br />