PDA

View Full Version : Chicago mayor considers creating city-owned grocery store after Walmart, Whole Foods close stores in the city



Teh One Who Knocks
09-18-2023, 01:23 PM
By Eric Revell | FOXBusiness


https://i.imgur.com/82yIwKt.png

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson announced last week that his administration is exploring a city-owned grocery store as a means of promoting "equitable" access to food, though the plan has drawn criticism from skeptics of a government owned and operated store.

Chicago would become the first major U.S. city to implement a municipally owned grocery store to address food inequity if the proposal advances, the mayor’s office said in a release. Johnson’s office said Wednesday that it’s working with the Economic Security Project, a non-profit group, on a feasibility study that "will help inform the Johnson administration’s emerging food retail strategy, which will receive input from experts, community leaders, and Chicago’s Food Equity Council."

"All Chicagoans deserve to live near convenient, affordable, healthy grocery options. We know access to grocery stores is already a challenge for many residents, especially on the South and West sides," Johnson said. "My administration is committed to advancing innovative, whole-of-government approaches to address these inequities. I am proud to work alongside partners to take this step in envisioning what a municipally owned grocery store in Chicago could look like."

The mayor’s office added that "Historic disinvestment has led to inequitable access to food retail across Chicago, and these existing inequities have been exacerbated as at least six grocery stores closed on the South and West sides over the past two years."

It cited data from the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture estimated that 63.5% of residents in West Englewood and 52% of East Garfield Park residents live more than half a mile from their nearest grocery store. It added that "food access and security link directly to environmental and racial justice. 37% of Black residents and 29% of Latine/x residents are food insecure, compared to 19% of residents overall."

https://i.imgur.com/X1oTXAV.png

Several big-name grocery stores have been among those that closed in recent years. Last year, Whole Foods closed a store in the South Side neighborhood of Englewood six years after it opened in an area that was considered to be a "food desert."

Walmart announced the closure of three stores in Chicago’s South and West Side neighborhoods this April, in addition to one store in the more affluent North Side after years of challenges with profitability despite investing in upgrades to the facilities. Those closures occurred after Walmart CEO Doug McMillon warned in December that its stores across the country were grappling with shoplifting to a degree that, "If it's not corrected over time, prices will be higher, and/or stores will close."

"The simplest explanation is that collectively our Chicago stores have not been profitable since we opened the first one nearly 17 years ago – these stores lose tens of millions of dollars a year, and their annual losses nearly doubled in just the last five years," Walmart wrote in a post announcing the closures. "The remaining four Chicago stores continue to face the same business difficulties, but we think this decision gives us the best chance to help keep them open and serving the community."

Since then, crime has not abated in the Windy City. After his election, Mayor Johnson's allies proposed a budget that cut funds from the Chicago Police Department. Johnson has pledged not to cut the city's police budget.

https://i.imgur.com/mu2fPtG.png

The mayor’s office said in a release that it intends to pursue "values aligned funding opportunities" for the city-owned grocery store initiative such as those from the Illinois Grocery Initiative, which commits $20 million for grants and technical assistance for grocery stores in the state. The city didn’t provide a timeline for the study.

The city of Chicago’s budgetary woes could factor into its capacity to move forward with the city-owned grocery store project using municipal funding following the conclusion of the feasibility study. Last week, Johnson’s office also announced a projected budget gap of $538 million for the upcoming 2024 fiscal year.

"The projected budget gap paints a realistic picture of our city’s financial condition, which will require careful consideration and strategic action," Johnson said. "In the coming weeks, we will be taking a much closer look at the challenges we face, and how we will address those challenges reasonably and responsibly, not on the backs of workers and working families."

PorkChopSandwiches
09-18-2023, 03:58 PM
Don't fix the problem, don't even address it

Teh One Who Knocks
09-18-2023, 04:10 PM
The problem is racism :nono:

PorkChopSandwiches
09-18-2023, 04:43 PM
clearly. but I'm sure a government run store will be much more profitable

Pony
09-18-2023, 09:27 PM
clearly. but I'm sure a government run store will be much more profitable

They can pass out govt issued vouchers so everyone gets their fair share of bread. :tup:

Godfather
09-19-2023, 02:50 AM
I'm in favor of socializing some things that I don't think should be for-profit. Policy, fire, K-12 education are ones we almost all agree on. More controversially, I'm totally fine with our government socializing health care, power, water... the basics everyone should have not-for-profit, universal access to, IMHO (and I'm open to a system where it's semi-private or a two tier system even then)....

But retail? No.The word communism gets thrown around by a lot of folks who don't seem to know what it means, but this is a wild proposal to me. Firmly would not be in favor. The free market needs to still be the dominant force of our economy. If free enterprise can't thrive and innovate, the government is seriously fucking up.

Pony
09-19-2023, 10:24 AM
The free market needs to still be the dominant force of our economy. If free enterprise can't thrive and innovate, the government is seriously fucking up.

That's my biggest issue with Healthcare, Power, Water, ETC.
hose industries are already heavily regulated by Govt. The same government who is very well known for spending excessive amounts of money on top heavy programs that in the end do very little to "solve" the issues they face.
California, one of the largest economies here in the states is having major issues with power and water that can be tied directly to decades of government mismanagement both federal and state.

I would love to have a government that could be trusted to run things smoothly and efficiently without stifling innovation, but they can't even manage to solve the simplest of issues without it turning into a huge, expensive program that takes years to resolve.

Smaller government with some oversight is what this country was built on, these days it seems we're heading more and more toward an all powerful Galactic Empire.