Sheetz, a Pennsylvania-based company that sells gasoline and made-to-order food, wants to expand its footprint in Michigan. The chain, which offers a wide selection of decent meals at a low cost, has plans to add dozens of new stations in metro Detroit.
It shouldn’t be news that a company with several hundred stores wants to expand. But Sheetz is in the news because some businesses, citizens and public officials in various cities want to to use government power to prevent the retailer from opening.
Some complaints come from people who object to the gas stations’ 24/7 operations. Others say the stores would be too noisy or too close to residential areas. Some complaints are more legitimate than others, and most can be mitigated with a few changes to the company’s plan for the site in question.
But some objections are just examples of good old-fashioned, anti-competitive behavior. Owners of other gas stations are worried about what Sheetz might mean for them and other owners, and they support regulations to stop Sheetz from opening. One business owner declared simply, “I don’t want them competing with me,” in a comment published by Crain’s Detroit Business.
Local officials — and the business community — should reject these efforts. Building and zoning regulations should be about rational planning and protecting the public. Protecting some businesses from others is not a legitimate reason for zoning laws.
Michigan needs to be a competitive state — not a guild state. In the former, consumers benefit when businesses compete for their business. In the latter, existing favored businesses use the government to pull up the ladder behind them, stopping new companies from starting, growing and thriving.
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