Oakland Sears still hasn't repaired windows
A woman walks past a boarded- up entrance to the Sears store on Telegraph Avenue. The windows were broken in July
Jewelry is displayed behind defaced, but unbroken, windows at the Sears
department store on Telegraph Avenue in Oakland, Calif. on Tuesday, Dec.
3, 2013. Other display windows of the store were heavily damaged during
demonstrations after the George Zimmerman verdict in July and store
management has been slow to replace them claiming it's too expensive
Even some of the Oakland Sears' holiday displays have been obscured by the boarded-up windows.
A holiday window display is covered with plywood at the Sears department
store on Telegraph Avenue in Oakland, Calif. on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2013.
The display windows were heavily damaged during demonstrations after the
George Zimmerman verdict in July and store management has been slow to
replace them claiming it's too expensive.
The electronic sign above the Sears department store on Telegraph Avenue
shows years of neglect in Oakland, Calif. on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2013. The
display windows were heavily damaged during demonstrations after the
George Zimmerman verdict in July and store management has been slow to
replace them claiming it's too expensive.
A man rides his bicycle past boarded up windows at the Sears department
store on Telegraph Avenue in Oakland, Calif. on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2013.
The display windows were heavily damaged during demonstrations after the
George Zimmerman verdict in July and store management has been slow to
replace them claiming it's too expensive.
Pedestrians walk past boarded up windows at the Sears department store
on Telegraph Avenue in Oakland, Calif. on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2013. The
display windows were heavily damaged during demonstrations after the
George Zimmerman verdict in July and store management has been slow to
replace them claiming it's too expensive
Pedestrians walk past boarded up windows at the Sears department store
on Telegraph Avenue in Oakland, Calif. on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2013. The
display windows were heavily damaged during demonstrations after the
George Zimmerman verdict in July and store management has been slow to
replace them claiming it's too expensive
Jewelry is displayed behind defaced, but unbroken, windows at the
Sears department store on Telegraph Avenue in Oakland, Calif. on
Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2013. Other display windows of the store were heavily
damaged during demonstrations after the George Zimmerman verdict in July
and store management has been slow to replace them claiming it's too
expensive
A window at Sears is shattered after protesters set fires and
vandalized stores in downtown Oakland on Saturday, July 13, 2013, after
the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the Trayvon Martin court case.
Pedestrians walk past smashed windows at Sears on Telegraph Avenue
after protesters set fires and vandalized stores in downtown Oakland on
Saturday, July 13, 2013, after the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the
Trayvon Martin court case.
The Sears sign in Oakland in 2004.
After buying a pair of socks and a shirt at the Oakland Sears, Glen Parker waits for a bus to take him home in 2004.
After buying shirts at the Oakland Sears in 2004, Ray Mogil of
Berkeley looks for his car in the parking lot across the street.
For a short time in July, downtown Oakland looked like a ghost town
marked by boarded-up windows and graffiti after rioters, angry at the
acquittal of George Zimmerman in the murder of teenager Trayvon Martin
in Florida, swept through the area with masked faces.
But while
other small businesses and shops replaced their glass and cleaned up
their storefronts within a few weeks, Sears, one of the city's biggest
retailers, still looks practically abandoned almost five months later.
The
big building at 1955 Broadway, which spans more than half a block,
still has giant sheets of plywood over most of its windows. Almost every
opening along the Telegraph Avenue side is blocked out, and the store's
cheery holiday displays on 20th Street are also half hidden by
the boards.
Neighbors have spent the past few months asking the
store's managers and the city to fix the storefront, but have gotten
no results.
"I walk past it every day - it's depressing," said
Gilbert Lara, 46, who lives a block away. "It really affects the quality
of life in that area because the building's such a huge
presence there."
Sears, though, has no plans to fix the problem.
Howard Riefs, a company spokesman, said that because the windows are
difficult to replace, the store has no time frame for when repairs will
begin and end.
"The custom windows date back to the 1930s, and replacing them is more complicated than those in a typical building," he said.
Lara
said neighbors, after hearing a similar response from Sears, went to
the city for help. Under Oakland's municipal code, inspectors can cite
businesses or individuals for building code violations or blight.
Rachel
Flynn, director of Oakland's Department of Planning and Building, said
the agency tries to work with property owners on a resolution before
issuing citations or fees. A few months ago, she said, inspectors
informed Sears that it could not have exposed and unfinished wood on its
windows, prompting the store to paint the plywood.
When the city
continued to get complaints about the windows, inspectors cited the
business last month for general blight, Flynn said. Sears was given a
month to respond to the citation with a plan to fix the issue.
"Our
goal is to always to work with property owners and see what can be done
and what is reasonable," she said. "That's what we'll have to do."
Lara
said while no downtown business deserved to be vandalized in July, the
majority of them - many small, local businesses with considerably less
wealth than corporations like Sears - had taken care of their damage
within a week. But almost five months later, Sears still can't seem to
get it together.
"I stopped following up because we were just
getting the same answer and nothing was happening," he said. "It feels
like no one cares about this neighborhood."
What's not working
Issue: The
windows of the Sears department store in downtown Oakland remain broken
and boarded up from a protest almost five months ago.
What's been done: Sears
representatives said the windows are difficult and expensive to
replace, and that they have no timeline for when repairs will begin.
City officials said they're working with Sears to reach a resolution,
and have already cited them under the city's municipal code for a blight
violation. Sears officials have a month to come up with a plan to fix
the windows.
0 comments:
Post a Comment