Walmart's sudden move to close 4 Chicago stores sparks outrage, with critics saying it will drive up grocery costs for the neediest families - Everyone hates Walmart until they want to close down, then they're a necessity all of a sudden.

Walmart's sudden move to close 4 Chicago stores sparks outrage, with critics saying it will drive up grocery costs for the neediest familiesWalmart announced this week that it is closing four stores in Chicago in a matter of days.
  • Elected officials said that the decision to close the stores "worsens food deserts" in the area.
  • Walmart has closed dozens of stores nationwide this year, citing "underperformance" as an issue.
Walmart's decision to shutter four Chicago stores has drawn ire of elected officials representing the Windy City.

In a rare press release on April 11 announcing store closures, Walmart said bluntly that these 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," the company said. "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."

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said in a statement she was "incredibly disappointed" by the decision.

"Unceremoniously abandoning these neighborhoods will create barriers to basic needs for thousands of residents," Lightfoot said. "While near-term arrangements will be made for workers, I fear that many will find that their long-term opportunities have been significantly diminished."

In its announcement, Walmart said all affected store employees would be assisted in transferring to any other Walmart or Sam's Club location, and that those who do not transfer will be paid until August 11. Additional severance benefits will be available to eligible employees after that time.

llinois' layoff law — broader in scope than the federal WARN Act — requires many large employers to provide 60 calendar days' notice before a location closure that is expected to result in 75 or more job losses. Walmart typically does file advance notice where required.

Employers who close without full notice may be responsible for paying workers for up to 60 days, but Walmart appears to go well beyond covering that period; it will provide 17 weeks of wages for those who don't transfer to other stores.

Walmart declined to comment on whether it is providing comparable wage extensions for workers at other closing stores, including elsewhere in Illinois.

Local lawmakers meanwhile have expressed alarm over the swift closures — Walmart is shutting the stores five days after its announcement — and the impact on communities where shoppers rely on Walmart for everyday essentials.

A coalition that includes two state representatives, a state senator, and incoming and current members of the Chicago City Council called the move "unethical" in a statement.

"The communities of the South and West sides of Chicago have already been struggling with increased food costs due to inflation," the coalition said. "Walmart's decision to close four stores in predominantly Black and Brown communities not only worsens food deserts, but will also increase grocery costs for families."

Shoppers at these stores have echoed these concerns. Regina Dickey, a 38-year-old Chicago resident who shopped at the Walmart Supercenter at 8431 S. Stewart Ave., told the Chicago Sun-Times this week that "it's like (Walmart) didn't even give a thought to the people in these communities."

Walmart isn't a stranger to store closures this year. Since February, the retail giant has announced plans to close 20 retail locations across 11 states and Washington D.C.

The move represents a retreat of an aggressive urban expansion Walmart made in recent years. The company does not operate any stores in New York City, and with these closures in Chicago, Walmart is halving its footprint in the third largest city in the United States.

The four Walmart stores closing in Chicago​

  • Chatham Supercenter, the Walmart Health center, and the Walmart Academy, 8431 S. Stewart Ave.
  • Kenwood Neighborhood Market, 4720 S. Cottage Grove Ave.
  • Lakeview Neighborhood Market, 2844 N. Broadway St.
  • Little Village Neighborhood Market, 2551 W. Cermak Road

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Everyone's celebrating but I'm going to be a party-pooper and throw in my black-pill about what's going on and what's going to happen next:

I think this is all leading to mandatory services/goverment owned stores. You have to remember leftists and corporations have perfected the long con and are hand-in-hand. They're using a legitimate issue- stores that are unprofitable and closing, largely because of theft, to create a crisis of "food deserts". We're going to be increasingly inundate with stories about how the poor niggers and spics of these big cities have NO FOOD and SOMETHING MUST BE DONE. That something will be the benevolent goverment stepping in to yet again give benefits and tie people to it. They'll either pass laws forcing stores to continue to operate in "minority at-risk food desert areas" or they'll open their own stores in those areas. Of course what won't get talked about is how Walmart and other mega corpos will be getting huge tax-payer/fed reserve printed money kickbacks for either maintaining those stores or supplying the government owned ones. The program will be hailed as a huge success and expanded across the country, suddenly your local Walmart and grocery store will also be unprofitable, close, and open again under goverment management so that now you too have to shop at these places. It will be a huge step towards the communism that leftists want, it will increase everyone's dependance on the goverment, and it will give billions, possibly trillions, more to the already money-sucking corpos. It's the company store all over again, but this time perfected with the infusion of goverment regulation.

They already sort of do that in terms of taxpayer incentives.

There was a Whole Foods that opened (and eventually closed) in a ghettohood in Chicago. Not ghetto enough to drive off the local Jewel, but ghetto enough that Whole Foods was probably losing money hand over fist BEFORE shoplifting was calculated in.
 
Watching every city that has embraced leftist policies rapidly collapse under the weight their own evil is pretty great.

Non-American here. What's wrong with Walmart?
WalMart spent the last 30 years as the primary distribution network for Chinese slave goods and as a booster for outsourcing. They encourage manufacturers to drop quality and outsource so that they can make goods so cheap that they will undercut everyone, until they are basically the only store in town.
 
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Non-American here. What's wrong with Walmart?
It's just an annoying mega corp that donates to globohomo and does retarded shit like this

It does have some benefits for price reduction and optionality, but it's very much a cheap shit shop. It's not so much that it's evil, it's more that it's "is this all there really is?"
 
Meaningless discoloration on vegetables tends to be a no-go for shoppers here. It's kind of silly
People who have never gardened really do tend to be retarded about that.

I've seen a shopper hold up a beautiful, big, fresh, perfect head of lettuce, turn it around, and put it back on the shelf with a look of disgust when she saw it had some soil on it.

Bitch, where do you think lettuce grows?
 
Thats because the US market is so weak....
In Europe walmart opened up, saw that they cant even get close to the prices of grocery stores and closed.
Dont belief the "they were to antiunion" BS. Aldi and Lidl have a long records off using highly illegal tactics to union bust, like locking people into storage rooms for hours.

Fun fact: Underberg is about to get a lot more expensive in Denmark.:stress:

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Fun fact: Underberg is about to get a lot more expensive in Denmark.:stress:
That stuff is disgusting, also who buys alcohol in denmark? there are giant supermarkets right at the border that pretty much only sell alcohol to crossborder shoppers and germany making a hollydays in denmark.

Skandinavia is at a point of taxes and lack of borderguards that ssmuggling might be a good idea.
 
I do like how there's no zero mention of why it's not profitable for Walmart to operate in these areas. Perhaps a certain demographic could be the primary cause...

I guarantee if they opened in a food desert people are shopping there a lot. Therefore I think "underperformance" is just a way to say "too much theft" without sounding racist.

Locking stuff up in cabinets isn't enough. You need more security guards and you need to be tougher on shoplifting in general. Most of this isn't little old lady who can't afford tuna and low income mother whose boyfriend cleaned her out and now she can't get baby food. It's junkies looking for Red Bull and candy and hoodrats who steal anything that isn't tied down so they can sell it to bodegas or at bus stations.

Before our 7-11 shut down due to rampant armed robberies they had an alarm on the fridge that held the Red Bull. I'm starting to think that stores should be locking up chips too at this point. And candy. And practically everything else. Just make it like the old days where you have to tell the proprietor what you want and they get it for you. There's already convenience and liquor stores where everything, employees included, is behind bulletproof glass. At this point they have the right idea.
People who have never gardened really do tend to be retarded about that.

I've seen a shopper hold up a beautiful, big, fresh, perfect head of lettuce, turn it around, and put it back on the shelf with a look of disgust when she saw it had some soil on it.

Bitch, where do you think lettuce grows?

I know produce can be flawed because I remember back when weird produce was still on shelves. Now most of the weird shapes are heirloom tomatoes because for some reason they are allowed to look strange. Maybe this stuff can be moved easier if we call it heirloom. Mutant apple? That's an heirloom apple! Siamese twin banana? That's an heirloom banana! :biggrin:

Red delicious apples were ruined because people were being too autistic about fruit. Now they are just tasteless apple shaped sadness.

If you buy a prepackaged produce then you usually see a few odd ducks in there. I got a double mushroom and some tangerines that had thick, greenish skin. But they all tasted normal. Had they not been prebagged they probably would have sat there until they rotted.
The past couple years Aldi has closed a few stores in similar "communities" of Chicago...
edit: + a whole foods in a similar community April 29, 2022
edit 2: Niggers Never Happy : "Englewood Residents, Alderpeople Protest As Controversial Save A Lot Prepares To Open: ‘This Is No Way To Enter A Community’" April 5, 2023

Save a Lot is disgusting. I've been there. Do not recommend.
 
I guarantee if they opened in a food desert people are shopping there a lot. Therefore I think "underperformance" is just a way to say "too much theft" without sounding racist.

Locking stuff up in cabinets isn't enough. You need more security guards and you need to be tougher on shoplifting in general. Most of this isn't little old lady who can't afford tuna and low income mother whose boyfriend cleaned her out and now she can't get baby food. It's junkies looking for Red Bull and candy and hoodrats who steal anything that isn't tied down so they can sell it to bodegas or at bus stations.

Before our 7-11 shut down due to rampant armed robberies they had an alarm on the fridge that held the Red Bull. I'm starting to think that stores should be locking up chips too at this point. And candy. And practically everything else. Just make it like the old days where you have to tell the proprietor what you want and they get it for you. There's already convenience and liquor stores where everything, employees included, is behind bulletproof glass. At this point they have the right idea.
I wonder about the feasibility of an "online pickup only" type grocery store, at least in those areas. Wal-mart already does online pickup, why not try a store that does that exclusively and keeps the main building sealed up so joggers can't shoplift?
 
This is the result of how big businesses like Walmart created such a dependency where local supermarkets could not compete. Add insult to injury, once they leave for safety and financial reasons, you don't have much choice. Wait until small businesses decide to follow ship.
Walmart ran out the mom and pop stores, but they would have closed up shop long before Walmart did, because they have less ability to suffer theft and damage. Hoodrats don't respect local owners anymore than big corporations.
 
I wonder about the feasibility of an "online pickup only" type grocery store, at least in those areas. Wal-mart already does online pickup, why not try a store that does that exclusively and keeps the main building sealed up so joggers can't shoplift?
It isn't just direct in store theft, though.

Black employees can steal from anywhere in the chain. They can steal from inventory, or form the trucks, or the cash drawers, etc. If crime is rampant in other stores nearby - it's going to reduce foot traffic to the main store, no matter how safe it's deemed to be.

Doing an "online pickup only" would work in theory, but would massively increase labor costs as you would need to dedicate way more people to the shopping experience. You would also have to have more cashiers also - as Walmart is very geared for "self service" (you get your own stuff and 80% of the time check yourself out).
 
It isn't just direct in store theft, though.

Black employees can steal from anywhere in the chain. They can steal from inventory, or form the trucks, or the cash drawers, etc. If crime is rampant in other stores nearby - it's going to reduce foot traffic to the main store, no matter how safe it's deemed to be.

Doing an "online pickup only" would work in theory, but would massively increase labor costs as you would need to dedicate way more people to the shopping experience. You would also have to have more cashiers also - as Walmart is very geared for "self service" (you get your own stuff and 80% of the time check yourself out).
Fair point on the first part. Cashiers though? I'm not so sure about that. If it's online shopping then Shirley they could have people prepay with a card.
 
Wal-mart already does online pickup, why not try a store that does that exclusively and keeps the main building sealed up so joggers can't shoplift?

Fair point on the first part. Cashiers though? I'm not so sure about that. If it's online shopping then Shirley they could have people prepay with a card.
In addition to what @Tanner Glass responded, I can picture the riff raff attempting to hold up the people tasked with giving people their orders, and I could also see more people trying to use fake/stolen credit card numbers to see if they can get past their fraud protection and stick it to the evil big corporation.

Sadly, no system will be foolproof when the low life shamelessly devote a lot of their time to beating those systems -- especially when local government's policies and indifference encourages them to do so with impunity.
 
I wonder about the feasibility of an "online pickup only" type grocery store, at least in those areas. Wal-mart already does online pickup, why not try a store that does that exclusively and keeps the main building sealed up so joggers can't shoplift?
Way back, you'd go to the store, hand the clerk a list, and then wait while he picked everything for you. The concept of picking your own products in stores is somewhat new and was invented by a chain still around today. I think it was Piggly Wiggly.

As for your idea, you have to remember that darkies don't know how to use computers.
 
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