Theft and jobs, the end of self-checkout in stores

Written by Parriva — May 7, 2024
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A proposed state law could change regulations on self-checkout, forcing some California stores to do away with the service altogether.

“The hope is that we can reduce the amount of theft that happens. That’s a much better solution than punishing theft after it occurs,” said Cristine Soto DeBerry, founder and executive director of Prosecutors Alliance of California.

Senate Bill 1446 would regulate self-checkouts in hopes of boosting employment and cutting down on thefts.

“There’s data on this that shows there is stuff that happens at self-checkouts,” said Soto DeBerry.
If voted into law, grocery and pharmacy retailers would have to meet certain requirements or get rid of self-check outs, including upping the number of employees monitoring the stations.

“One of the main deterrents from theft is that there are staff paying attention in the store to your activities,” said Soto DeBerry.

“In part it’s codifying some requirements that I think, from our perspective, are a little heavy-handed, as far as getting down into the granularity of how business or a store needs to operate,” said Ashley Hoffman, senior policy advocate of California Chamber of Commerce.

The chamber is coming out against the proposed legislation, in part, over concerns it could hurt business.

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