Illustration of diverse small business owners standing in a row, including a chef, tailor, barista, florist, barber, and other service professionals, each holding tools related to their trade.

Strip Mining Main Street

June 16, 20262 min read

Strip Mining America's Main Street

Strip mining is one of the most destructive environmental practices on Earth. It tears through layers of soil, rock, and vegetation to expose valuable minerals or coal beneath the surface. The immediate result is a scarred, lifeless landscape. But the long-term damage is even worse: contaminated water, ruined ecosystems, and land so poisoned it takes generations to heal.

It’s not hard to see the parallels between strip mining and what’s happening to small businesses across America today. But instead of minerals, the resource being extracted is wealth. Instead of mountains and forests, the landscape being stripped is Main Street.

The Takeover of Main Street

I recently spoke with the owner of a local service company who told me that he gets calls every single week from private equity firms trying to buy him out. It’s tempting, right? A big payday, a chance to cash in after years of hard work. But the consequences for the community are dire.

When small businesses sell to private equity, the profits don’t stay local. That money no longer circulates through the community, supporting local schools, public services, and other businesses. It’s funneled upward—out of town, out of state, and into the pockets of investors who have no stake in the community.

This is how local economies die.

Small businesses are the backbone of the middle class. They create jobs, sponsor Little League teams, and donate to local charities. When they’re replaced by corporate chains or consolidated under the control of a PE firm, those jobs become low-wage positions, the local sponsorships disappear, and the wealth generated by the business is shipped off to a distant headquarters.

So What Can We Do?

Shop Local – Every dollar you spend at a locally-owned business stays in your community. Supporting local businesses helps create jobs, strengthen the tax base, and keep money circulating where it belongs.


Support Small Business Owners – When your favorite local shop or service asks for support, give it. Leave a review, recommend them to a friend, and make an effort to spend your money there.

Just like land can recover with care and time, so can Main Street. It starts with awareness, and it grows with action; one purchase, one recommendation, one decision at a time.

blog author avatar

Eileen Voyles

Co-founder, Yokl, Inc.

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