I work at one. Unfortunately you’re not wrong. Mine is also in a food desert, a fact they take full advantage of. I’ve at least convinced them to let me donate outdated bread and dry/canned goods. They act like it’s some grand fkn gesture while paying poverty wages and charging extortion prices
Not an excuse but I’ve been told that some big stores don’t donate expired stuff for liability reasons. Which is bullshit. We have enough food for everyone but profits are always put before people. And if you can’t afford food you’re probably not gonna get a lawyer to sue for free bread that hurt your tummy.
That’s a common myth. There are laws in place that exempt stores from liability in this exact scenario. No, the real reason they do it is to enforce artificial scarcity. They can’t donate to a food bank, because then people might get it for free instead of paying the store for it.
Take a look sometime at the Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Food Donation Act. It protects donations made in good faith; liability only comes into play when ill intent is involved (i.e. purposely sending spoiled meat). That’s how I was able to convince them for the little bit they’ve gone for so far.
“liability” being a euphemism for artificial scarcity. Ever seen those videos of employees forced to cut up perfectly good clothes or that girl fired from Dunkin for donating donuts they told her to throw away? they need to keep their prices up and destroy their own product to do so.
damn damn damn damn damn there’s a really expensive blazer with a real faint paisley i wanted to buy ten or so years ago and looked great in but i didn’t have 700 bucks in the jacket fund (i have bought 700 bucks worth of regret tho) so i left it in the store. and just hoped i would somehow run into it somewhere, sometime in the future. not as fabric shreds.
I work at an auto parts scrap facility and you’re right on the money. Besides defective parts, there is a mind boggling amount of brand new parts that never make it into a car. Anything that the automaker can’t sell gets shredded and destroyed so resellers can’t get at them and the automaker gets a cut of the refund for the materials.
There’s nothing to expose; the local community is well aware how overpriced the store is. They promote themselves as a small independent chain while being owned by the largest grocery distributor in the US other than Walmart. It’s disgusting, and I hate them for it. But I’m doing what I can to help from the inside to stop so much waste at least.
I’d love nothing more than to “expose” them, but there’s literally nothing that can be done. Take solace in the fact that our grocery sales are actually down significantly and my guess is my particular location will be shuttered inside of a year.
Neither. I can tell you we’ve been purchased twice in the last 8 months; we were purchased in february by a large grocery distributor, publicly traded, and then about 3 months ago they were purchased by the largest privately owned grocery distributor in the country in a 1.8 Billion dollar deal.
But yeah, they still ride the reputation of the small chain (think 12 stores in a small tristate region) and use that to justify their high prices. Management’s answer to any complaint is always “we’re a small local business, we don’t have the purchasing power of a Walmart”. Yeah, not entirely true. Not by a long shot.
I work at one. Unfortunately you’re not wrong. Mine is also in a food desert, a fact they take full advantage of. I’ve at least convinced them to let me donate outdated bread and dry/canned goods. They act like it’s some grand fkn gesture while paying poverty wages and charging extortion prices
edited for grammar
Not an excuse but I’ve been told that some big stores don’t donate expired stuff for liability reasons. Which is bullshit. We have enough food for everyone but profits are always put before people. And if you can’t afford food you’re probably not gonna get a lawyer to sue for free bread that hurt your tummy.
That’s a common myth. There are laws in place that exempt stores from liability in this exact scenario. No, the real reason they do it is to enforce artificial scarcity. They can’t donate to a food bank, because then people might get it for free instead of paying the store for it.
Take a look sometime at the Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Food Donation Act. It protects donations made in good faith; liability only comes into play when ill intent is involved (i.e. purposely sending spoiled meat). That’s how I was able to convince them for the little bit they’ve gone for so far.
“liability” being a euphemism for artificial scarcity. Ever seen those videos of employees forced to cut up perfectly good clothes or that girl fired from Dunkin for donating donuts they told her to throw away? they need to keep their prices up and destroy their own product to do so.
damn damn damn damn damn there’s a really expensive blazer with a real faint paisley i wanted to buy ten or so years ago and looked great in but i didn’t have 700 bucks in the jacket fund (i have bought 700 bucks worth of regret tho) so i left it in the store. and just hoped i would somehow run into it somewhere, sometime in the future. not as fabric shreds.
I work at an auto parts scrap facility and you’re right on the money. Besides defective parts, there is a mind boggling amount of brand new parts that never make it into a car. Anything that the automaker can’t sell gets shredded and destroyed so resellers can’t get at them and the automaker gets a cut of the refund for the materials.
Feel free to expose them by putting together evidence and releasing it.
There’s nothing to expose; the local community is well aware how overpriced the store is. They promote themselves as a small independent chain while being owned by the largest grocery distributor in the US other than Walmart. It’s disgusting, and I hate them for it. But I’m doing what I can to help from the inside to stop so much waste at least.
I’d love nothing more than to “expose” them, but there’s literally nothing that can be done. Take solace in the fact that our grocery sales are actually down significantly and my guess is my particular location will be shuttered inside of a year.
Burn it down
I’d love to. But the way things are going around here, I might need that insider access to the bread lines.
The outcome of that is less availability of groceries, long treks to buy food, and higher prices.
What’s actually needed is a unionized competitor
That won’t happen
It can with local support.
Sure, but it’s not going to happen. The country is dead… people just haven’t realized it yet.
Taking control of a local government via an election remains doable for a modestly sized and motivated group. You can change things
So… Is it a kroger or albertsons subsidiary?
Neither. I can tell you we’ve been purchased twice in the last 8 months; we were purchased in february by a large grocery distributor, publicly traded, and then about 3 months ago they were purchased by the largest privately owned grocery distributor in the country in a 1.8 Billion dollar deal.
But yeah, they still ride the reputation of the small chain (think 12 stores in a small tristate region) and use that to justify their high prices. Management’s answer to any complaint is always “we’re a small local business, we don’t have the purchasing power of a Walmart”. Yeah, not entirely true. Not by a long shot.
Huh, ive never heard of another mego grocer with that kind of money to throw around. Thats interesting. Are yall at least unionized like the others?