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Business

Why some stores have pulled their self-checkout machines

While retail automation appears inevitable, at least a few Canadian Tire stores in Toronto, plus a grocery chain in the U.S. are bucking the trend: instead of adding more self-checkout machines, theyre removing ones already in place.

A few Canadian Tire stores and a U.S. grocer have shifted away from self-checkouts

A person scans a set of plastic containters at self-checkout.
Self-checkouts are supposed to provide convenience for customers, but some complain that they're can be cumbersome to use. (CBC)

When Jacqueline Burnett discovered that her local Canadian Tire in Toronto recently removed its self-checkout machines, she was ecstatic.

"I can't say enough with how impressed I was," saidBurnett,who prefers to interact with a cashier and believes many othersfeel the same way. "I think they're on to something."

In anera where retail automation appears inevitable, at least a few Canadian Tire stores in Toronto, plus a small grocery chain in the U.S.,are bucking the trend: Instead of adding self-checkout machines, they're removing them.

Self-checkouts, which were created to provide convenience for customers and cut costs for companies, have becomean indelible part of the retail landscape. But the machines have also sparked a backlash from shoppers who complain that they can bedifficult to useand threaten cashier jobs.

"Basically, they're asking us to do their work," said Burnett.

CBC News identifiedthree Canadian Tirestores in Toronto thatrecently removed their self-checkout machines.

The retailerdeclined to say whetherany other locations have followed suit. It said in an email that each of its storesis independently operated by an associate dealerwho decides "what checkout experience works best for their customers."

CBC News found three Canadian Tires in Toronto that recently got rid of their self-checkout machines. (CBC)

Of the three Toronto Canadian Tire stores that pulled their machines, one responded to a request for comment.

Associate dealerTim Tallon saidhis locationhad four self-checkouts andbecause they were old, they were inefficient and kept breaking down.

"It was a bit of a pain," he said.

He removed the machines last summer andcreated a queue system much like the clothing chainWinners where all shoppers wait in one line for the next available cashier.

Some Canadian Tire stores, including this one on Toronto's Lakeshore Blvd., have customers wait in a single line for the next available cashier. (CBC)

Tallon said the single line moves quickly and he's received positive feedback from customers.

"I just think it's more efficient and we're quite happy with it," he said. "I can't see us going back to self-checkouts in the near future."

Diego Fuentes shops at Tallon's store located in Toronto'sStockyards shopping district. He saidthe new system is a timesaver unlike self-checkout.

"When you have to weigh things, and you have to check the product code, all that stuff, it's a waste of your time."

Fuentesis also happy the machinesare gone because he worries about their potential impact on retail workers.

"It becomes the norm and people get used to it. And sadly, it means [cashiers] just lose their jobs."

Jacqueline Burnett isn't a fan of self-checkout machines and is glad her local Canadian Tire in Toronto got rid of them. (Submitted by Jacqueline Burnett)

The Canadian Tire store whereBurnett shopsalso created one line forall customers after removing its self-checkouts. She saidthe wait for a cashier is much shorter now.

"I think that they're going to find they have a happier customer base."

Goodbye self-checkout

In the U.S., PCC Community Markets is saying goodbye to all its self-checkouts, which the grocer started adding to stores in 2008.

Two of its newest stores never got the machines and PCC says it will have completely removed the ones installed in its other nine locations by May. In their place, the Seattle-based co-op is adding an express lane, operated by a cashier.

"It's right for the experience we want to create," said Heather Snavely, PCC's vice-president of marketing.

PCC Community Markets in the Seattle area is getting rid of self-checkouts at all its grocery stores. (PCC Community Markets)

She said the co-op ran a test last spring in one of its stores, where it compared the number of people who used self- checkout versus going to a cashier.

Two-thirds of customers chose cashier lines, she said.This led PCC to conclude self-checkouts just weren't a good fit for a chain that focuses on community.

"The majority of our shoppers prefer that interaction with someone," Snavelysaid. "You can't create connection at a kiosk or community at a kiosk."

Change is inevitable

Despite some stores pulling their self-checkouts, retail consultant Marion Chan saidthe tide is still turningtoward automation.

"It is inevitable, like any technological change," said Chan, owner of TrendSpotter Consulting in Toronto.

She said many people, especially younger shoppers, like the ease of self-checkout. However, a retailer might choose to remove the machines because some customers still find the technology cumbersome, said Chan.

"It is a cost-savingsbut if it's really annoying people, then it's probably not worth it."

Self-checkout machines lined up in a Canadian Tire store
Some Canadian Tires are adding self-checkouts. This location in Calgary announced on Facebook in July that it had installed four machines. (Canadian Tire/Facebook)

But as technology advances, Chan predicts many retailers will eventually move to a completely cashier-less format and more consumers will embrace the automated checkout process.

"Like any technological change, we will get pulled into that vortex."

Kyle Ross, ofSummerside, P.E.I., says he's already been pulled into the self-checkout vortex: When shopping, he checks out using a machine whenever he can.

"They are very convenient and make for a quick trip in and out of the store," he said. "Usually no lines at allit's very fast and I find them very simple to use."

And while some Canadian Tire storeshave ditched their self-checkouts, other storeshave added machines. The retailer reports thatthe ratio of self-serve to full-service checkouts in its stores has remained constant over the past year.

Still, Burnett hopes that the self-checkout-free formatat her location catches on.

"It's a good plan for the future. It's not old-fashioned in my opinion."