Outdoor mega-retailer Bass Pro Shops is planning on coming to Decatur.  Hooray, right?  Not so fast.

The store will be part of the “Sweetwater” project - and the city offered up a sweet deal indeed to entice the outdoor juggernaut.  The city will give them - that’s right, give them - a “free” $32 million dollar building sitting on a $2.5 million dollar piece of land.  That is in addition to millions of dollars in infrastructure improvements.

The deal has predictably irritated a Decatur outdoor retailer that has been in business for over five decades.  David Wiley of Wiley’s Outdoor Sports is fighting the sweetheart deal.  He has launched the aptly named website www.saynotobasspro.com and has been on WHNT (video here) and in the Decatur Daily.

Long time readers know that I am no fan of government furnished corporate welfare.  I abhor seeing the government giving one business a competitive advantage over another.  This particular case is especially egregious.  Wiley Outdoor Sports has been in business locally since 1953.  The stakeholders there have deep roots in the community.  For the city to extend such a generous offer to attract a large, out of state direct competitor to come to town and siphon off business from Wiley’s is unconscionable.

Decatur mayor Don Kyle gave this statement to WHNT:

The development will add significant value to our community tax base, grow our population, and bring many shoppers off the interstate and from surrounding communities to shop in all our stores.

It reminds me of the mindset present in the infamous Kelo vs. New London SCOTUS decision.  While that case centered on eminent domian abuse, the local officials in Connecticut shared Kyle’s philosophy.  All they care about is growing the tax base.  To hell with anyone who may be hurt along the way.  Kyle gave his statement in response to a story specifically about the impact on local competitors, namely Wiley’s.  He acted as if Wiley’s didn’t even exist or, worse yet, that having a Bass Pro Shops down the road will somehow help Wiley’s business.

If Bass Pro wants to come and pay their own freight I wouldn’t even bat an eye.  But to provide such an unfair advantage to one company at the expense of a local company is detestable.  Is it really worth growing your tax base if it means trampling all over members of the community who took risks to establish and operate businesses?

[Sidenote: I'm a big Bass Pro fan.  Back when I was a kid I convinced my parents to route our summer road trip so that we went to the original Bass Pro store in Springfield, Mo.  Some kids want to go see a pro baseball game.  I wanted to shop at the fishing gear Mecca.] 

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