My perspective… a continuation of anti-business by the same cronies.



Food Trucks are gaining an increased presence in Roswell with advocacy and support of local government and local business associations. The very groups that should be advocating and looking out for local businesses appear to be caught up in the wave of what is trendy and cool versus what is wise and practical. This is disappointing. Food Trucks are undoubtedly popular and a chíc dining choices across the nation. From coast-to-coast the food truck evolution is taking root; it is featured in competitions and shows on television. Years ago, long before the novelty of high end cuisine from a truck came about, food trucks provided inexpensive chow to blue collar workers that could not get out to restaurants during scheduled lunch breaks. These are not your grandpa's food trucks.

As white-collar suburban families race to Don White Park and Founders Park where these mobile dining boxes set up, overlooked is the slap to the face of local business owners. In March 2012 Roswell's municipal leaders signed into code an ordinance that allows for mobile food vendors in the City. Roswell's ordinance provides for an applicant to pay an annual $150 fee (and meet minimum requirements that any similar business owner would meet) for the privilege of being a mobile food operator. That is it, that is all… $150. Did you know when it is a "City Sponsored Event" such as Alive After 5 this license requirement and fee are waived ? Zero investment in our community.

Consider local business owners' perspectives. Having personally developed, constructed and operated both businesses and organizations in the City of Roswell, my firsthand experiences demonstrate $150 does not begin to scratch the surface of financial burdens placed on local residents being entrepreneurial in the local community. Where is consideration for local, brick and mortar businesses that employ residents, support the local tax base, fuel a neighborhood economy and support the charitable needs of this community?

The ridiculousness of the food trucks minimal license fee goes beyond its impact on local restaurants though, without question, these are our neighbor proprietors most severely impacted. Want to add patio seating at your local eatery? Need to upgrade electrical or plumbing to accommodate your guests? Do you need a simple sandwich board sign? It is these simple necessities that our local businesses face daily. Ask anyone that has done it. The hurdles, the over-reaching requirements and fees make doing business in Roswell a challenge at best. $150 will not get you anywhere.

Until the City gets serious about pro-development behavior towards local business owners, there is a way we, local residents, can make a difference.

Several years ago when our nation fell into its "economic crisis", a company I owned began a consulting initiative to local business owners known as Keep It Local. Our plan was part collaborative marketing, part education and part community philanthropy. Our success in North America opened doors where the Keep It Local program grew to impact local businesses in South Africa, New Zealand, Australia, Colombia and Peru. Would that program help Roswell businesses today? Absolutely. Nevertheless, with or without a formal program in place, the key for success is advocacy and commitment by local folks like you and I. I'm not urging you to make a plea to local government or walk in a protest march. (History shows government wouldn't listen anyhow.) The only thing we need of government is LESS.