A clothing store in Portland, Oregon, has been forced to permanently shutter after a string of break-ins amid rising crime in the city mean the business is no longer financially viable.
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Over the past 18 months, Rains PDX has been broken into 15 times.
The cost of repairing the damage together with the amount of stock being stolen each time has given the owners no choice but to close for good.
It is the latest in a series of problems for key businesses in the Democratic stronghold, which is struggling to contain spiraling crime.
Nike, whose HQ is in nearby Beaverton, had to close a long-standing community store for weeks because shoplifting was so out of control and iconic ice cream shop Salt & Straw last week threatened to move its headquarters out of Oregon.
To residents wondering why the Rains store is no more, a searing note on the front door reveals all with ‘unrelenting criminal behavior’ and ‘escalating safety issues for our employees’ to blame.
‘Our city is in peril.
Small businesses (and large) cannot sustain doing business, in our city’s current state. We have no protection, or recourse, against the criminal behavior that goes unpunished. Do not be fooled into thinking that insurance companies cover losses. We have sustained 15 break-ins … we have not received any financial reimbursement since the 3rd,’ the store’s owner Marcy Landolfo wrote.
A Portland, Oregon, clothing shop permanently shut down this month after facing a string of break-ins that has left the store financially gutted, according to a note posted to the front of the store
‘Our city is in peril,’ a note posted on Rains PDX store reads, according to KATU2
‘Small businesses (and large) cannot sustain doing business, in our city’s current state.
We have no protection, or recourse, against the criminal behavior that goes unpunished. Do not be fooled into thinking that insurance companies in ph (4mark wrote) companies cover losses. We have sustained 15 break-ins… we have not received any financial reimbursement since the 3rd,’ the note read
Landolfo explained that the business is simply unable to survive such financial burdens.
‘The problem is, as small businesses, we cannot sustain those types of losses and stay in business.
I won’t even go into the numbers of how much has been out of pocket,’ she told ‘The products that are being targeted are the very expensive winter products and I just felt like the minute I get those in the store they’re going to get stolen,’ she said.
When the store was broken into in October, Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler promised the city was going to come up with a plan to help out business owners who had been targeted and needed assistance to repair their shops. needed to repair their shops.
‘Paying for glass that’s great, but that is so surface and does nothing for the root cause of the problem, so it’s never going to change,’ Landolfo said, noting that crime is the major problem.
‘Mayor Wheeler and his team understand that local businesses often must make a choice whether to pay out of pocket or file a claim with their insurance after a break-in,’ a statement from Wheeler’s office read.
It is the latest store in Portland to close following a spike in crime
‘For this reason, we’ve worked to increase funding for Business Repair Grants through Prosper Portland, and recently held a Retail Safety Summit to strategize with local business leaders and loss prevention specialists on the retail theft crisis.
We are also working with interested property owners to streamline the permitting process to add enhanced lighting to storefronts, which can help deter nighttime break-ins,’ the spokesperson added.
Popular ice cream business Salt & Straw threatened to move its Portland headquarters out of Oregon last week as crime, drug use and homelessness continue to plague the woke Democratic city.
Salt & Straw was created to be a community gathering place, according to its website, but co-founder Kim Malek said Wednesday that if things don’t change, they’d be forced to leave
Salt & Straw was created to be a community gathering place, according to its website.
It was set up as a parlor in 2011, and quickly became known as one of the United States’ best scoop shops, further bolstering Portland’s reputation as one of America’s best foodie cities.
But co-founder Kim Malek said last Wednesday that if things don’t change, her firm will be forced to leave.
Ice Cream business Salt & Straw has threatened to move its Portland headquarters out of Oregon as crime, drug use and homelessness continue to plague the Democratic city
‘We would consider all options,’ Malek told ‘We don’t have concrete plans.
But our intention is to be at the table working with the city and county to find a solution and not move. Portland is part of the soul of our company. We love this city. This is about having a safe place for our team to work.’
Last Monday, an RV fire near the company’s headquarters brought down a transformer and caused Salt & Straw and several other businesses to lose power.
The fire and gun incident was detailed in an email by Lauderdale.
‘Their lease is up in April, and although it will cost them millions and millions to relocate, they are at a breaking point and are planning to move out of state,’ Lauderdale wrote.
Portland has more than 700 homeless encampments across the city within less than 150 square miles and there has been skyrocketing crime in the area






