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Hurricane Frances

Retailers take their day off in stride

Frances rudely cut into a three-day weekend traditionally profitable for merchants, but they say it could be worse.

By KRIS HUNDLEY
Published September 6, 2004


Latest developments

THE STORM
Frances cripples Florida, keeps pounding away


Gov. Bush takes step to save gas supply
Homeowners now must wait to settle insurance claims
Q&A: After the storm passes, getting life back in order
By the numbers
Rains fall, water breaks; motel contains a midwife!
Storm soaks Polk County, but 'Charley was a lot tougher'
Live reports, dramatic footage fill bay area's televisions, radios
Storming across Florida
For pizzerias that opened, very busy day

TAMPA BAY
Bay area mainly withstands its latest scare
Frances' squalls soak Pinellas
Labor Day weekend was lost - in more ways than one
Slow storm slows power crews
Crippled travel slowly limping back
Thousands wait out hurricane in schools, churches
Retailers take their day off in stride
Lumbering storm's damage light in North Pinellas
Acidic, radioactive water spills into bay
Frances largely spares Hillsborough
Mart becomes oasis in the storm
Inside shelter, weary evacuees try to relax
Winds whip up blaze at Plant City tire store

PASCO
As Frances moves in, few areas unaffected
Pasco takes a lashing from Frances' winds
Power, trees lost in storm
Shelters subsist on prayer, pinochle

HERNANDO
Sheltered from the storm, life goes on
Storm grinds county to standstill
Storm forces events rescheduling

CITRUS
Family takes shelter among breads, carbs
Neighbors find shelter and each other
Waiting. Watching. Weathering.

CLOSEUP: Hurricane Charley
Force of nature

Labor Day weekend's reputation as a retailing bonanza took a hit from Hurricane Frances on Sunday as Tampa Bay residents hunkered down at home.

With only a few scattered retail outlets open - a fast-food restaurant here, a convenience store there - consumers were focused on staying safe, not spending, as the storm slogged its way across the state.

All local malls were closed due to the weather. Strip centers were shuttered. Car lots were empty. Cash registers were silent.

Aj Jemison, general manager of International Plaza, tried to be philosophical about the closing of her Tampa mall on Sunday.

"We only would have been open six hours anyway," she said. "And if the weather had been great, people would have been on the beach."

Jemison found some comfort in the fact that International Plaza had been packed on Saturday preceding the storm.

"You had people that evacuated from the East Coast who were sick of staying in their hotels," she said. "There were kids in the play area and families shopping and eating. So I doubt from a retail perspective we'll see any real loss."

Frank North, marketing director for Ferman Automotive Group, also downplayed any financial concerns as he watched Frances move through his neighborhood in south Tampa on Sunday.

"Labor Day is always a weekend of activity in the auto industry," he said. "But any revenue loss today is minuscule and insignificant compared perhaps to the loss to our community as a whole from this storm."

Ferman had closed all 12 of its locations in Pasco, Pinellas and Hillsborough counties Sunday, and North had a close eye on dealerships close to the projected path of the hurricane's eye.

"We're just praying all will be well," he said. "After the storm has passed, we can determine any kind of business loss or damage. But right now, that's not a concern at all."

Both Ferman and International Plaza planned to decide late Sunday whether their businesses would reopen today.

[Last modified September 5, 2004, 23:21:07]


Tampa Bay headlines

Hurricane Frances

  • Frances not ready to say goodbye
  • Pinellas: Outages, flooding slow traffic
  • Bay area mainly withstands its latest scare
  • Frances' squalls soak Pinellas
  • Labor Day weekend was lost - in more ways than one
  • Slow storm slows power crews
  • Crippled travel slowly limping back
  • Thousands wait out hurricane in schools, churches
  • Retailers take their day off in stride
  • Back to Top

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