Current Events > Florida town runs its own grocery store

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Antifar
10/15/19 11:42:26 AM
#1:


https://www.jacksonville.com/news/20190925/baldwin-opens-rare-town-run-grocery-store-to-fill-food-gap?

When the IGA in Baldwin closed a year ago, leaving the town of about 1,500 people with no grocery, Mayor Sean Lynch and the Town Council tried to find a replacement.
But there were no takers.

The big-box chains said the 10,000-square-foot IGA space was too small, and mom-and pop-type merchants said it was too big. Meanwhile, residents had to drive 10 miles to Macclenny or 20 miles to Jacksonville to buy fresh food. Many of the towns seniors and poor residents were unable to make the trip.

Baldwin, in southwestern Duval County, became a so-called food desert, a community with limited access to affordable, healthy food.

So in July, Lynch and the council decided to become grocers possibly the only local government in the country to do so and opened the town-owned and operated Baldwin Market.

The city already owned the store formerly occupied by IGA and the land under it, at U.S. 90 and U.S. 301. All it had to do was staff and stock. The store had a soft opening Friday, a grand opening Saturday and has seen a steady stream of customers since then. Sixteen-hundred people visited the store Friday through Sunday, Lynch said.

It was fantastic, Lynch said. A little more than I expected.

Two sections were particularly popular the meats, which sold out the first day, requiring a resupply from a local butcher and fresh vegetables, he said.

The store is a business, not a nonprofit. The goal is not to make a profit, but to make sure residents have access to fresh food, Lynch said. The council took $150,000 from a reserve fund to hire staff, pay food vendors and rehab the refrigeration system and it plans to repay the money in monthly installments. After the debt is paid, profits will be plowed back into the business, he said.
Lynch is optimistic the store will continue to be a success.
Everybody wanted it ... It was important to the local people, he said.
...
Other communities across the country have come up with other innovative solutions for food deserts: There are nonprofit grocery stores in Baltimore, Denver, Washington and Waco, Texas, while other places have gone the food cooperative route, according to news reports.
Local governments have helped community groups save existing grocers threatened with closing and establish and run new ones. When the only grocery in Onaga, Kan., burned and the owner chose not to rebuild, a local entrepreneur and a bank negotiated a deal with the city to build the grocery store and the City Council allocated $375,000 toward the new building, according to news reports. In Walsh, Colo., and Washburn, Ill., townspeople bought their respective local grocery stores after they closed, and in Leeton, Mo., the local high school runs the towns only grocery store.
...
Esther and Bill Atkins, who live just outside the town limits, shopped in the store Saturday. They went just to check it out and get enchiladas but ended up buying $55 worth of groceries, Esther Atkins said.

I was happy to see something back in Baldwin, she said. How the town tackled its food desert status, she said, was amazing.

It was well-stocked ... they used a lot of local farmers and vendors. Also, prices were compatible to that found in Walmart or other stores miles away, she said.
Baldwin Market will be particularly welcome to the towns low-income residents, many of whom cant afford to drive to other communities, she said.
The councils decision to solve the problem itself also won praise from Feeding Northeast Florida, a Jacksonville-based regional food bank.

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kin to all that throbs
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TheDreadedWave
10/15/19 11:45:45 AM
#2:


Sounds like communism!

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"I am Ferdinand Von Aegir" - Ferdinand Von Aegir
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thronedfire2
10/15/19 11:48:05 AM
#3:


next stop, communism
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I could see you, but I couldn't hear you You were holding your hat in the breeze Turning away from me In this moment you were stolen...
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Questionmarktarius
10/15/19 12:02:55 PM
#4:


So long as it's revenue-positive, I don't see a problem.

TheDreadedWave posted...
Sounds like communism!

So is your local water department, if this is the criteria.
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TheDreadedWave
10/15/19 12:05:20 PM
#5:


Questionmarktarius supports communism, everyone update your tags

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"I am Ferdinand Von Aegir" - Ferdinand Von Aegir
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#6
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Parappa09
10/15/19 12:07:20 PM
#7:


thronedfire2 posted...
next stop, communism
yes pls

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creativerealms
10/15/19 12:07:40 PM
#8:


Sounds liken it was the only solution.
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Occam's razor: The simplest solution (answer) is most likely the right one
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Questionmarktarius
10/15/19 12:07:58 PM
#9:


TheDreadedWave posted...
Questionmarktarius supports communism, everyone update your tags

I've been to a Hy-Vee once or twice, yes.
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#10
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JE19426
10/15/19 12:10:58 PM
#11:


Questionmarktarius posted...
So is your local water department


Nope, my local water department is a privately owned for profit company.
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#12
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Questionmarktarius
10/15/19 12:12:35 PM
#13:


fenderbender321 posted...
It makes you wonder why IGA pulled out in the first place. If it's the only store in town it sounds like easy money.

IGA is some sort of bizarre pseudo-franchise system that's mostly just a branded supply-chain infrastructure for locally-owned stores.
The local owners didn't want to run the store anymore, apparently.
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