"Any large retailer in a town or city pays more in real estate taxes than a lot of people even EARN in that neighborhood."
That isn't even the point. They MAKE more money, too, don't they? I don't see police cars at ANY business more than I see at Walmart.
Let's do a little comparison with 2016 figures from MarketWatch:
Nordstrom Dept Stores have 349 stores in the U.S. and a total annual net income of $354 million (average store income = just over $1 million), AND they have their own security teams.
Walmart has 4,575 stores in the U.S. and a total net annual income of $14.7 billion (average store income = $3.2 million). Walmart has 'security' people who are really just regular store employees who watch people put stuff in their pockets or bags, and they call local police. (I know quite a few people who work or have worked for Walmart.)
Yes, they pay some taxes. Yes, they provide jobs. BUT when a city police officer is STATIONED at a WalMart, which side of the cost fulcrum do you think it sits on?
And if you want to extrapolate that a little farther as to how it affects van dwellers.... A while back I looked up Atlanta, GA Walmarts for overnight parking for someone. There are seven stores in the immediate area, and NONE of them allow overnight parking.
Okay, that's a city in the South with a poor crime rep, so I tried the three joined towns where I grew up as a kid, about 25 mi. E of Los Angeles, CA. There is one Walmart in each town, no parking allowed in any of them. Do you think that is due to crime, or just a coincidence?
https://www.allstays.com/c/wal-mart-locations.htm
Walmart is taking advantage, PERIOD. And everyone else pays the price, one way or another. Follow the Money.