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New Laws Would Kill Off Surviving Record Stores

CapitalismNEW YORK (Billboard) - Independent merchants selling and buying used CDs across the United States say they are alarmed by stepped-up pawn-broker-related laws recently enacted in Florida and Utah and pending in Rhode Island and Wisconsin. May 04, 2007

New laws create second-hand woes for CD retailers

By Ed Christman

NEW YORK (Billboard) - Independent merchants selling and buying used CDs across the United States say they are alarmed by stepped-up pawn-broker-related laws recently enacted in Florida and Utah and pending in Rhode Island and Wisconsin.

In Florida, the new legislation requires all stores buying second-hand merchandise for resale to apply for a permit and file security in the form of a $10,000 bond with the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. In addition, stores would be required to thumb-print customers selling used CDs, and acquire a copy of state-issued identity documents such as a driver's license. Furthermore, stores could issue only store credit -- not cash -- in exchange for traded CDs, and would be required to hold discs for 30 days before reselling them.

At least one Florida town has enforced the law, resulting in the cited merchant pulling used CDs from its store.

The law in Utah and the legislation pending in Wisconsin and Rhode Island are also harsher than typical pawn-shop laws, according to John Mitchell, outside counsel for NARM (National Association of Recording Merchandisers).

Brian Faber, director of operations for the eight-store, Phoenix-based Zia chain, says that while the rules sound onerous and could devalue the used-CD market, "we would comply and the market would ultimately adjust itself."

Faber says about 40 percent of his chain's volume comes from used-CD sales, paying out 80 percent cash and 20 percent store credit. If retailers could only pay out credit, he says, it could negatively affect product flow. The used-CD business' low pricing, he adds, is already being devalued by falling prices of new CDs.

Meanwhile, NARM says it will try to help shape the pending legislation. In Florida, retailers selling previously owned videos and videogames managed to carve out a partial exemption from the law so that they do not need a permit and have to wait only 15 days before reselling the merchandise.

Reuters/Billboard

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New Laws Would Kill Off Surviving Record Stores | 3 comments | Create New Account
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New Laws Would Kill Off Surviving Record Stores
Authored by: Pomegranate on Sunday, May 06 2007 @ 12:24 PM UTC
A recalcitrant area of my brain says great, let's play their game with them. But let's expand it, certainly the issue of music is benign compared to the health and safety issues (and profit margins *cough*) associated with used clothing stores, antique stores, used book stores, libraries and computer shops. Why should we stand by and allow them to be exempted?

Next we should consider the real estate industry as well. Previously-owned homes: good for the bottom line?



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When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.


New Laws Would Kill Off Surviving Record Stores
Authored by: Renegade on Sunday, May 06 2007 @ 06:34 PM UTC
"stores would be required to thumb-print customers selling used CDs, and acquire a copy of state-issued identity documents such as a driver's license."
that is really fucked-up. The Mushroom in New Orleans has an incredible music collection of tapes and discs, and even records.
If that law were enacted in Louisiana, riots would start. Buying and selling cool stuff is the Mushroom's business and there should be more places like it. you can even trade stuff so no money need be involved.
lets boycott regular music stores; or do something in Florida that would make it difficult for the law to stay. lets open a discussion on possible solutions. thank you

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~~~I know things~~~
New Laws Would Kill Off Surviving Record Stores
Authored by: surfinfarmer on Sunday, May 06 2007 @ 07:26 PM UTC
Anytime terms such as illegal downloading, copyright infringement, intellectual property and legislation regarding them appear in the media you can bet that the industry and its lawyers are behind it.

I'm not so sure about all the states listed but I am pretty sure that one or two of the listed state's government tend to be rather corrupt. Corruption means taking money in exchange for a social service for those that don't know. It is as human as any other vice.

The very nature of information regardless of the medium is like that of the photons emitted from the sun. No single unit is worth much by itself but it is the sum total that creates the illusion of a larger illumination. Is it appropriate to legislate who owns which particular rays of the sun? Should people be taxed upon the darkness of their sun tan? The answer lies subjectively along the fence of corruption.