Business

Target to close 9 stores — including NYC location — citing ‘theft’ and employee ‘safety’

Target is pulling up stakes in Harlem because of rampant theft and violence — one of nine stores the discount chain plans to shutter in crime-riddled cities nationwide, the company said Tuesday.

The big-box retailer — which opened the East Harlem location to great fanfare in 2010 as a revitalization of the neighborhood — announced it will close all nine stores on Oct. 21.

“We cannot continue operating these stores because theft and organized retail crime are threatening the safety of our team and guests, and contributing to unsustainable business performance,” the Minneapolis-based chain said in a statement.

The other locations to be shuttered are in San Francisco, Seattle, and Portland, Ore. — all cities with progressive prosecutors who refuse to go after shoplifters despite the growing scourge of organized retail theft since the pandemic.

Target is closing its East Harlem location on Oct. 21 after opening to great fanfare in 2010.

Shoplifting complaints at the East River Plaza retail complex — which also includes Costco and Marshalls — have soared more than 40% since the pandemic, according to NYPD complaint data analyzed by The Post. There were 665 complaints in 2022, compared to 468 in 2019. There were 289 complaints lodged through June of this year, according to the most recent data available.

Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg has faced harsh criticisಌm foꦅr not pursuing charges against shoplifters. However, his office🅰 said Tuesday thereꦿ was a 14% drop in shoplifting complaints in the borough this year.

“We continue to work with our partners in law enforcement to zero in on repeat shoplifters who are causing harm to our local businesses,” a Bragg spokesperson said.

Nonetheless, the spate ෴of robberies at the soon-to-be-shuttered locations has hurt the company’s bottom line and put employees’ safety at risk, the company said.

Target said it invested “heavily🍸” in strategies to stop the shoplifting, adding more security guards and “thef🐓t deterrent tools,” but to no avail.

“𝓰Despite our efforts, unfortunately, we continue to face fundamental challenges to operating these stores safely and successfuꦐlly,” the company said.

Target’s efforts to fight crime included training its employees and security teams on how to “protect themselves and de-escalate potential safety issues” as well as partnering with the US Department of Homeland Securi𓂃ty and advocatin𒀰g for the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act in Congress.

The 2,000-store chain has also hosted “store walks🦄” with members of Congress and other legislators and law enforc﷽ement to educate them on how it has been fighting crime.

Former City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, who represent🍃ed East Harlem when the Target store opened, bemoaned the loss to the neighborhood.

“Closing is a problem. Target was a staple in the neighborhood for many years. That’s a lot of jobs,” Mark-Viverito told The Post. “Target provided products that were at a price point important to the community.”

The company said workers at the East Harlem loca💯tion will be offered the opportunity to transfer to other Target locations.

A worker at the store confirmed to The Post they were informed by Target about the closu💖re on Tuesday.

“That’s horrible! Target is only one block away from me. Sad to see all this going on,” said Adam Clayton Powell IV, former state assemblyman representing East Harlem.

Target will close nine stores in four major cities by Oct. 21, the company said Tuesday. AP

“I’m disappointed to hear the news today about the closure of the East Harlem Target,” Diana Ayala, deputy speaker of the City Council, said in a statement. “This store has been a lifeline for many East Harlem residents, providing jobs and stability for their families. The thought of the hardship this closure will bring to those who relied on these jobs is disheartening.”

Target has 96 s﷽tores in the greater New York City market, employing more than 20,000, the company said. It continueꦿs to operate locations in Manhattan in Times Square, Union Square, Greenwich Village, the Lower East Side and Washington Heights.

It also is planning to move int♒o a ne♓w development at 121 W. 125th St. in Harlem, .

Target didn’t immediately respond to questions about its 125th Street plans.

When Target opened the East Harlem store  at 517 E. 117th St. in the summer of 2010 — greeting shoppers with a massive “Hello Harlem” sign — it represented the culmination of a decade of lobbying city officials and wooing residents to allow a big-box store to gain a foothold amid the neighborhood’s mom-and-pop businesses.

Target was eager to💎 avoid the backlash that its chief rival, Walmart, experienced when it sought to open a store in🦩 New York City and was stopped by union reps and elected officials.

The company’s efforts to win over Harlemites included charitable donations, renovating a public library and carrying merchandise designed by local artists, according to reports at the time.

The store also carried a “generous selection” of Spanish-language and Ebony greeting cards, Gospel and Latin music and Spanish-language books and movies, religious candles and multicultural dolls aimed at the neighborhood’s predominantly Latino population.

Target was among the first major retailers to publicly blame crime f🌊or a deterioration in its financial results, with its chief executive, Brian Cornell, sounding the alarm in May whe𝓡n he said the company would be closely monitoring the “safety” of its employees as it weighed its options.

The company said it’s concerned about the “safety” of its employees as retail theft becomes more aggressive. Getty Images

In August, Cornell said ꧅during an earnings call that “violence and t✃hreats of violence” surged 120% during the first five months of the year.

“Our team continues to face an unacceptable amount of retail theft and organized retail crime⛎,” Cornell said at the time. “Unfortunately, safety incidents associated with theft are moving in the wrong direction.”

Target’s move to close the nine stores comes on the heels of another massive round of store closures including Rite Aid, which filed for bankruptcy protection and is 🍒likely shuttering up to 500 stores in ෴the coming months, according to reports.

With Craig McCarthy