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Many supermarkets use security tags on
high-value items like alcohol, video games, meat, and batteries. However, it is
rare to see them on everyday products, such as milk or cookies.
Britain’s biggest supermarket Tesco and other
chains are putting security tags on blocks of cheese and butter that cost less
than $5 to dissuade shoplifting
amid the cost-of-living crisis and growing inflation.
A Tesco spokesperson said “We
are placing tags on many products to prevent shoplifting. Many products have
been stolen recently”
"Tags are effective
because they're a deterrent," retail consultant Steve Dresser tweeted.
One store manager told UK
industry publication The Grocer “Today shoplifters are targeting low-price, everyday items. Last
week an elderly customer tried to steal shampoo and toothpaste”.
"Shoplifting is
typical in times of austerity or economic downturn," Sinéad Furey, a
senior lecturer at Ulster University stated.
The price of food and
non-alcoholic beverages in the UK rose by 8.7% in the year to May 2022,
according to the Office for National Statistics — and increased by 1.5% between April
and May alone.
Photo Credits: Grace Dean/Insider and Tam Herrington
From Business Insider (edited)
One hundred and thirty-three years on, the tower is still standing.
The tower receives about 6
million visitors in a typical year, making it the fourth most visited cultural
site in France after Disneyland, the Louvre and the Palace of
Versailles. Its Covid-enforced closure in 2020 led to a loss of €52m in income.
The repaint of only 5% of the tower will cost €60m
Experts predict the final result will be very poor.
They say painting over old paint will make the corrosion worse.
A report in 2010 said: “SETE must take another look at
the Eiffel Tower and come up with a completely new maintenance policy centered
on the testing of the ageing metal structure.”
A second report in 2014 by Expiris, an expert paint
company, found the tower had cracks and rusting and only 10% of the newer paint
on the tower was adhering to the structure.
A third report in 2016 found 884 faults, including 68
that were a risk to “the durability” of the structure. Each of the faults was
photographed, numbered and classified according to the degree of seriousness.
On the tower’s website, Bertrand Lemoine, an architect, engineer and
historian, gives a more optimistic view. “If SETE repaints the Eiffel Tower, it
will last forever”
From The Guardian (edited)