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Canton City Council Passes a Scaled-Back Shopping Cart Law

Shopping cart -- New Express Cart, by National Cart Company
National Cart Company website and cataloge
Shopping cart -- New Express Cart, by National Cart Company

Abandoned shopping carts are becoming so much of a nuisance in some parts of Canton that City Council has passed a law to try to address the problem.

Shopping cart -- New Express Cart, by National Cart Company
Credit National Cart Company website and cataloge
/
National Cart Company website and cataloge
Shopping cart -- New Express Cart, by National Cart Company

The carts are showing up in empty lots, the yards of boarded up houses, and sometimes in the street. 

Canton City Councilman John Mariol says they end up in neighborhoods "by and large from people who do not have transportation but need to get their groceries home. When you start seeing shopping carts in` neighborhoods that an indication that poverty is a problem.” 

Indeed the carts tend to be found most often in the city’s poorest wards, according to Mariol, where it appears that a lot of people who can’t afford transportation are using the shopping carts to walk their groceries home from the store. 

Since it is not practical to try to track down individuals, the law is designed to get at the problem through the stores. It requires them to devise measures like barriers and electronic wheel locks to keep their carts from getting way.

John Mariol, Canton City Councilman
Credit City of Canton webesite
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City of Canton webesite
John Mariol, Canton City Councilman

But Mariol, who voted for the ordinance, says it was watered down from what was originally planned.

As first written, the law would have imposed stiff penalties on stores for carts abandoned in the city.  He, says he and others on council and Mayor Tom Bernabei felt that was not the way to do for several reasons. 

There is a question of whether it is fair to bring charges against the stores, who are victims of a crime.  And, there is the issue of maintaining food outlets in the city.  

Mariol on Canton's dwindling food stores

“The city has s experienced a couple of grocery stores closing, and we have some food deserts. So, the penalizing of grocery stores in the city of Canton, in my opinion, was not a good strategy.”

Mariol says the mayor led the way in a re-writing of the ordinance; it no longer contains criminal penalties for the stores. The new law will go into effect April 4th.

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Canton City Council Passes a Scaled-Back Shopping Cart Law

Tim Rudell
Tim Rudell has worked in broadcasting and news since his student days at Kent State in the late 1960s and early 1970s (when he earned extra money as a stringer for UPI). He began full time in radio news in 1972 in his home town of Canton, OH.