Print this story | E-mail story | This story has 8 comments Add your own | iPod friendly | Bookmark this Facebook bookmark del.icio.us bookmark StumbleUpon bookmark Digg bookmark What is this?

photo by Sarah Stultz

Cato Fashions in Albert Lea sits empty Sunday evening, a day after the company officially closed its doors. The company’s president said the store closed because it was not meeting performance expectations.

Cato store closed Saturday

It was only store chain had in Minnesota

Published Monday, August 4, 2008

With the closing of Cato Fashions in Albert Lea Saturday, many area women are having to look elsewhere to find affordable, fashionable clothes.

The store in Albert Lea, which carried girls, junior/miss and plus sizes, was the only Cato location in Minnesota.

“We recently made the difficult decision to close the Cato Fashions store in Albert Lea because it was not meeting our performance expectations and had declining sales volume,” said John Cato, president and CEO of the company, in a statement.

He said the business regularly reviews all of its stores for performance and growth potential, and it is working to relocate store associates to neighboring stores, as possible.

The store operated in a strip mall to the south of Wal-Mart. After the closure, the closest Cato store will be in Des Moines.

Carly Solland, a frequent customer of the store, said she was disappointed at the closure.

“That breaks my heart,” Solland said.

For a while she used to visit Cato three to four times a month.

In fact, she said, it used to be a Friday ritual for her to go in and see the new products the company had out. The store truck would come on Wednesdays and the employees would have all of the new items out by Fridays.

Solland said she loved that the store had stylish clothes for all sizes, even larger women.

Melonie Miller, a former Cato employee from February 2006 through January of 2007, said there were several things she appreciated about the Cato corporation.

First, she said, she appreciated that on Sundays the store wouldn’t open until the afternoon to allow its staff the time to go to church if they desired.

Also, if there were clothes that didn’t sell, they would get donated to a local charity.

“I really enjoyed working there and shopping there,” Miller said.

The employees and managers were phenomenal people, who were always so helpful to their customers, she said. It was evident they liked their job.

“I really hope and pray that someone in their store in the community will find those girls and offer them jobs,” Miller said. “Because they’re awesome.”

They were only given a few weeks notice before the store closed.

The closure of Cato comes just a short while after another of Albert Lea’s businesses — Starbucks — closed its doors. And on Friday news broke that Albert Lea’s Bath & Body Works would close this month, too.

“I don’t know what prompted Cato, but it is tough economic times,” said Randy Kehr, executive director of the Albert Lea-Freeborn County Chamber of Commerce. “I think companies make decisions based on issues that we sometimes don’t even have control over.”

The cost of doing business continues to go up, and with the economy going the way it is, prices can’t go up accordingly, Kehr said. What people sometimes don’t remember is that that every time prices go up for the homeowner, they go up for the business owner, too.

He encouraged people to support local businesses, especially those that give back to the community.

That’s the simple and greatest thing we can do for our local businesses,” Kehr said.

According to the Cato Web site, there are more than 1,100 Cato stores across 32 states.


WOULD YOU LIKE TO SHARE THIS STORY?

Bookmark and Share



Comments

Posted by mommy07 (anonymous) on August 4, 2008 at 9:57 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Wow....Our economy is in need of HELP!!! What else will close..right now these stores are minimal but if we keep losing these businesses there wont be jobs for people that need these jobs. Those stimulas checks were nice but people used them to get out of debt not to help the economy... Well I hope our community stays strong and grows and no more businesses close!!

Posted by alcitizen (anonymous) on August 4, 2008 at 10:15 a.m. (Suggest removal)

The city is not business friendly. Ever wonder why Albert Lea has hard time attracting businesses? In just last month three businesses have closed (that is just in the paper, there are smaller businesses that close that no one cares about). Higher fees/taxes and the overall cost of business is Albert Lea is horrendous.

Posted by menace56 (anonymous) on August 4, 2008 at 10:28 a.m. (Suggest removal)

This isn't about Albert Lea. It's a much bigger problem than we can get a grip on. Our economy is in deep, very deep trouble.

Posted by Libby (anonymous) on August 4, 2008 at 12:46 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I no longer live in Albert Lea but once did and have seen the decline of the economy there which deeply saddens me. I've heard the rhetoric of how A.L. isn't "business friendly" and have to wonder if there is not a grain of truth in it. That being said, there are many reasons a business leaves. I'm familiar with Cato as I've shopped there and truth be told (while I enjoyed the experience) the location wasn't well-placed in my opinion. To shop there, you'd have to make an effort to go there. I'd not have even known of it's existance if a relative hadn't taken me there. It wasn't in a spot where it would have constant traffic, except for the Wal-Mart and the other small businesses located in that area. But businesses do a market survey, I'm sure before coming in, so maybe I'm wrong in this instance. As the corporation said, it wasn't meeting their company's expectations. So we go back to the spending-habits of the residents I'd say, and the "depressed" nature of the area was possibly a high contender to the closing.

Posted by alcitizen (anonymous) on August 4, 2008 at 1:03 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Three businesses have closed in Albert Lea in past few weeks. There is some grain of truth in that Albert Lea has high cost of doing business.

Posted by Wildbill (anonymous) on August 4, 2008 at 1:16 p.m. (Suggest removal)

The economy is bad, but Albert Lea's economy has been going
downward for years.

Posted by jam (anonymous) on August 4, 2008 at 8:23 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I agree with the comment about the less than stellar business climate. Look at what happened when Cabela's was turned away from town -- we could have had all those shoppers visit us instead.

Posted by regulators (anonymous) on August 4, 2008 at 11:04 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Freeborn county is the least educated county in the state.

I'm not surprised.

Post a comment (Terms of Use Policy)

(Requires free registration.)

Username:
Password: (Forgotten your password?)

Comment:




advanced search

© 2009 Albert Lea Tribune, Inc. All rights reserved.
A Boone Newspapers Inc. publication.

Contact us