When I started at Target in 2016, there were three trucks a week. Doubles or a fourth day were rare.
When I left there were trucks every day except the occasional Sunday and doubles were common.
The building had no additions. There was not any more floor space added anywhere. I looked at population stats between starting and leaving, population in the surrounding area had actually dropped 10%, not increased. Items went from finger spaced and no hanging in the back to the racks so crammed full of hanger that the clothes were bulging out and you couldn't take something without knocking several down and hanging in the back equally squished beyond all reason plus a few z-racks permanently back there for the hanging overflow. I one time counted 11 or 12 of the same item/size, grabbed all but 5 (even though standard was 2) and found over a dozen more in the back when I backstocked them.
I'm betting other stores are the same way. I'm betting freight received has tripled or quadrupled without the infrastructure having a matching increase to accommodate it. By matching, I mean back room space and sales floor space and hours for working the insane increase. I'm betting that other areas with a stagnant population are also receiving a huge increase in freight, like my old store.
That's the problem, and unfortunately there's only two solutions that would be long term fixes, not bandaids. One, hire a contractor to significantly increase building size in all stores and increase payroll to levels needed to knock out freight in a reasonable time. Two, enable stores to refuse freight so the amount of product is manageable, force purchasers to buy on a 141 system and warehouses on a 141 system for choosing items to put on trucks, and impose consequences against purchasers who over-purchase items that sit in the warehouse since no store has room.