Retail Crime Hurts. Let’s Put It in Check
Politics and sports go hand-in-hand as two of the most controversial conversation topics at any family gathering. Both have the power to drag otherwise tight-knit families down the rabbit hole of heated – and sometimes personal – debate.
If that sounds familiar to you, I’ll let you take solace in the fact that you don’t spend your Thanksgivings going back and forth between Columbus and Ann Arbor – I promise it can’t get much more heated than that.
The difference between politics and sports is that the latter is designed to create winners and losers while the former just makes everyone feel like they’ve lost.
Bit of a pessimistic outlook right? It is, but it doesn’t have to be that way. In today’s day and age where identity politics run so rampant, it’s easy to forget that the whole point of the government is to solve challenges for the country.
So yeah, all that to say we’re getting into politics in this article. But, don’t worry, I think retailers from Kansas to California will all be able to agree that organized retail crime needs to be stopped.
So, put the pitchforks away because we are all on the same team here. Back in February, a bipartisan team of Representatives introduced the “Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2023,” which proposes the establishment of a new branch of law enforcement under the Department of Homeland Security named the “Organized Retail Crime Coordination Center.”
According to the “Organized Retail Crime: An Assessment of a Persistent and Growing Threat” report released last week by the National Retail Federation, retail crime costs the economy nearly $100 billion a year. The problem only appears to be getting worse with 70 percent of retailers expressing the belief that the threat from organized retail crime (ORC) has been increasing over the last five years.
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