Every year the Saturday after Thanksgiving is reserved as
Small Business Saturday -- a way to remind Christmas shoppers that small
businesses would like a piece of your Christmas budget as well. But for many
small businesses, this day and this season is much more important to them than
you. Many small businesses balance their books during the Christmas season and
Small Business Saturday helps them do this. Additionally, for many smaller
cities, such as Elizabethton, small businesses are the community's largest
employer and are a big driver of the local economy.
This year, I would like to challenge everyone to spend 10 to
20 percent of their Christmas budget with local, small businesses. In 2015, the
average American Household spent on average $830 on Christmas gifts. 10 percent
of that is $83 and 20 percent is only $166. If you take that $83 and spend it
at small, local businesses you will contribute approximately $61.56 to the
Elizabethton local economy versus only $13.03 if you were to spend it at
Walgreens, Walmart, or Dollar General.
If every household in the Elizabethton area would shop small
and local on Small Business Saturday spending just $83 of their Christmas
budget, it would generate over $1.2 million of economic activity in our community!
If those same households spend $166 it would generate over $2.4 million of
economic activity! These numbers don’t include the number of new full-time or
part-time jobs created as a result of businesses expanding to handle more
business. What an amazing impact spending so little can have on our local economy
when we all participate.
In addition to creating economic impact to our community,
spending money locally helps our local schools. The Elizabethton City Council
has set aside 0.5 percent of the sale you make to go directly to our school
system in the form of sales tax. This earmarked portion of sales tax has paid
for projects such as the addition to West Side Elementary school, construction
of the gymnasium at East Side Elementary school, the elevator installation at Harold
McCormick Elementary school, and the construction of the new stadium and band
room at the High School. If you have children or grandchildren in school,
shopping locally is an easy way to provide better facilities for your child to
learn and grow in. And for County school attendees, a portion of every capital
project city schools borrow money for, County schools must also get a portion
of the money borrowed.
I recognized that you may not be able to find everything you’re
looking for in Elizabethton, but I would encourage you to follow this formula for finding what you’re looking for: shop small businesses in Elizabethton first,
then chain businesses in Elizabethton or Carter County, then local or chain
businesses in Johnson City, then local or chain businesses in Kingsport or
Bristol, then elsewhere in Tennessee or online. So this Saturday, wake up early,
get together with some of your family or friends, and head out for a day of
shopping in some of our local, small businesses. This not only helps you, but
our local small businesses, and our community! Let’s talk about it!
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