We had these satellite pharmacies/health care clinics in the military as well... the Troop Medical Clinic.
Overcrowded and underspecialized for sure, but you know what, it's showing the public that pharmacists do MORE than count by 5 and skulk in the wings of the pharmacy, which I think is a great improvement.
I hear at UCSF this year, the student-interns are doing flu vaccinations! I hope I get in, as I think that'd be a pretty cool experience overall.
People will still go to their PCP - I mean, employer-paid health insurance and such might not pay for a retail clinic, and things of that nature. While I think the McDonald's-ization of health care as a general rule is pretty sad and as pharmacists we're only an inch away from "Would you like fries with your Metformin?" but I think the exposure, again, to the public is invaluable.
I can't count how many times I've told people, friends, family about going to pharmacy school and the like... And they say, "Why would you just want to count pills all day long?" because that's "all pharmacists do." Some people, intelligent people even, don't know the difference between a CPhT and a Pharmacist or which is which in the pharmacy. Retail clinics offering basic services that a Pharmacist could perform might assuage that, perhaps.