Consumers Respond to 7-Eleven’s Call to Action in Public Policy Petition Drive

Company Calls 1.6 Million Signatures Collected a Referendum for Congressional Action

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In what company officials call an overwhelming referendum for Congressional action, 7-Eleven, Inc. today announced its franchisees and store operators have collected more than 1.6 million signatures in the “Stop Unfair Credit Card Fees” petition drive. We believe this marks the largest number of signatures collected for a public policy issue on record.

“Consumer response to this grassroots petition drive exceeded expectations”

Thousands of 7-Eleven franchisees across the country asked customers to support their neighborhood stores by signing petitions calling for Congress to pass legislation that prohibits credit card networks and card-issuing banks from charging unfair transaction fees. The signature drive ran from June 22 through Aug. 10 at store counters coast to coast.

“Consumer response to this grassroots petition drive exceeded expectations,” said Joe DePinto, 7-Eleven president and CEO. “Customers share our frustration over the hidden fees that American retailers and, ultimately, consumers are forced to pay. They, too, want Congress to take action to regulate these unfair fees, which are the highest in the industrialized world.”

Interchange fees aren’t transparent to the consumer and assessed to store owners every time a consumer uses a credit card. These charges result in higher prices which are borne by all consumers, whether or not they use a card or cash. In 2008 alone, these fees cost American businesses and their customers $48 billion. According to the National Association of Convenience Stores (NACS) 2008 State of the Industry data, on average, an American convenience store owner paid 63 percent more in transaction fees than they earned in profits.

Credit card companies typically levy more than $2 in fees for every $100 consumers charge at American businesses. Convenience stores generally have smaller purchases which typically result in much higher rates. For example, with the recently published rate hike by MasterCard, if a customer uses a MasterCard Pin Debit card to make a $1.00 purchase at a convenience store the charge to the merchant would be $0.20, or 20% of the transaction. This will be nearly twice the current rate. Rules set by the card companies require that retailers accept cards for all transactions. 7-Eleven stores are not allowed to set a minimum sale amount for card use which would help them avoid these outrageous fees.

7-Eleven is bringing eight store operators to Washington, D.C. that represent the various U.S. divisions where stores are located so they can present nearly 15,000 petition booklets to their Congressional representative. They will also participate in a press conference on Sept. 30 at the U.S. Capitol.

The store operators, their store locations and the number of signatures collected are as follows:

7-ELEVEN FRANCHISEE   STORE ADDRESS   TOTAL # OF SIGNATURES
National

Navdeep Bassi

 

Northeast corner of

204 E. 17th St.

Costa Mesa, CA

  5,726
Northeast

Harshal Patel

 

8001 Frankford Ave. at Tolbut

Philadelphia, PA

  4,989
Southwest

Matt Mattu

 

500 W. 7th St. at Olive St.

Los Angeles, CA

  4,293
Florida

Hitesh Patel

 

1850 Knox McCrea at Barna

Titusville, FL

  3,450
Central U.S.

Dayle Street

 

4811 South State St.

at 4800 South

Murray, UT

  2,863
Pacific Northwest

Sumeet Bedi

 

5040 148 Avenue NE

Near 51st St.

Redmond, WA

  2,477
Chesapeake area

Rene Ayo

 

6900 Military Highway at Song Meadow

Norfolk, VA

  1,625
Great Lakes

Jon Baloch

 

31385 Joy Road at Merriman

Westland, MI

  1,027

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6057175&lang=en

Contacts

7-Eleven, Inc.
Margaret Chabris, 972-828-7285
Margaret.chabris@7-11.com

Permalink: http://www.businesswire.com/news/google/20090924005937/en/Consumers-Respond-7-Eleven%E2%80%99s-Call-Action-Public-Policy

Smart Multimedia Gallery

Joe DePinto, president and CEO of 7-Eleven, Inc., is shown with some of the 14,000 petition pads containing 1.66 million signatures from 7-Eleven(R) stores' customers calling for fair credit card interchange fee legislation. DePinto and eight 7-Eleven store operators who collected the most signatures are headed to Washington, D.C., Sept 30 to present the signed petitions to their congressional representatives. If stacked on top of each other, the petition booklets, each with room for 270 signatures, would measure 311 feet tall, 33 feet taller than U.S. Capitol building. (Photo: Business Wire)

Joe DePinto, president and CEO of 7-Eleven, Inc., is shown with some of the 14,000 petition pads containing 1.66 million signatures from 7-Eleven(R) stores' customers calling for fair credit card interchange fee legislation. DePinto and eight 7-Eleven store operators who collected the most signatures are headed to Washington, D.C., Sept 30 to present the signed petitions to their congressional representatives. If stacked on top of each other, the petition booklets, each with room for 270 signatures, would measure 311 feet tall, 33 feet taller than U.S. Capitol building. (Photo: Business Wire)

Download Formats

Sharing

Better Be Business Wired.

Business Wire is the leading source for press releases, photos, multimedia and regulatory filings from companies and groups throughout the world.