Posted on 10/26/2022 7:37:09 AM PDT by ChicagoConservative27
Two Wawa stores in Philadelphia closed for good over the weekend, while other locations are shortening hours amid an uptick in crime.
“We are very sorry we can’t be there for our friends and neighbors at these two locations, but we continue to serve the community from our other nearby stores and our commitment to the greater region remains strong,” Wawa said in a statement to FOX 29, regarding the locations at 12th and Market and 19th and Market. “Philadelphia is our hometown and that’s something that will never change.”
Locations in Feasterville, a Philadelphia suburb, will be closed between midnight and 5 a.m. ET.
Earlier this month, an employee was pepper sprayed during a robbery at a store in the Philadelphia neighborhood of University City.
“Despite reducing hours and investing in additional operational measures, continued safety and security challenges and business factors have made it increasingly difficult to remain open in these two locations,” the company said in a statement earlier this month. “All associates from these two stores will be offered continued employment at Wawa.”
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
Same in all blue cities with a large feral population
No,no,no. It's racism.
Don’t include Aldi in that list; they’re awesome. Great products at reasonable prices. Here in Houston, they’re extremely popular and in several of the ‘high priced’ neighborhoods such as Sugarland and Pearland.
I see two companies on that list; one owned by Kroger and another by Albertsons. The statement elsewhere on this thread that there is “no national grocery” is both correct technically and wrong practically.
Albertsons and Kroger have both grown tremendously over the last two decades, through buying competing regional grocers. It has gone mostly unnoticed because the buying company leaves the name of the exiting company on the front of the store. Both of those large chains control about 60% of the grocery business in this nation... through their own brands and the brand names of their owned subsidiaries.
The only Aldis I have encountered in Dallas need a quarter to unlock a shopping cart. The produce and meat selections look like the end of a long day at the Braums ‘grocery section’. Not a good place to shop.
Every Aldi requires a quarter for a shopping cart. That way, they don’t hire baggers/sackers to bag your groceries (which you have to do yourself with bags you either purchase or bring yourself), saving money.
I’d say you went on the wrong day if the produce and/or meat selection was poor. I’ve gotten good steaks there, and the produce we eat (apples, grapes, bananas, cantaloupe, carrots, potatoes, etc.) are always good.
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