Sunday, December 8, 2013

Icy Wind from Toronto: Washington's Fresh and Green Closing

The Faces of Grocery Workers Losing Their Jobs


Barrington Marsh

Bill Fitzpatrick

Caleve Bright-Davies

Don Looney

Donald Andrews

Carol Holliday

Tony Brox

James Truesdale

Jenny Yliquin

Sally Nwabikwu

Shirley Middleton

Sally Crabbe

Mike Havey

Kwaku Kyeremateng

Tim Macleod

WASHINGTON: The cold wind from Toronto swept into Washington December 2d with the announcement by Natural Markets Food Group CEO Robin Michel that the Spring Valley store would close by the end of the month, perhaps as soon as December 15th. The unwanted Christmas present was a shock to the store’s 40 plus employees, several of whom have worked at the location for 25 years.

Michel, who came to the Natural Markets parent of Fresh and Green’s a year ago, was previously a top executive at Sears Holdings, run by billionaire investor Eddie Lampert, and before that at Giant Foods.

She said the closing of the six Fresh and Green’s stores in Maryland and DC acquired in the 2011 Super Fresh bankruptcy auction was “a very difficult business decision.” Despite the company’s best efforts, she said, the stores “remained unprofitable.”

Several Spring Valley store employees dispute the assertion that their store is unprofitable. Some suspect that the closure is an attempt by the Toronto-based hedge fund that owns Natural Markets to destroy the union, Local 400 of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union (UFCW). Cashier Sally Crabbe, a 27-year veteran at Spring Valley, predicts the site will eventually reopen as a non-union Mrs. Green’s, one of five brands in the Natural Markets portfolio.

In November, Natural Markets announced that company is in the midst of expansion and “taking the Mrs. Green’s concept” to several US and Canadian locations. The company has reportedly acquired a DC location near Dupont Circle. The Mrs. Green’s franchise emphasizes nutritious and organic foods, combining grocery shopping with take-away nutritious meals. Catalyst Capital, the company’s private equity owner in Toronto, says an initial private offering of Natural Markets shares is planned.

Catalyst Capital, the Toronto private equity shop headed by Gabriel de Alba, declares on its website that it is “a leader in active, distressed investing.” Its holdings include YRC trucking, a casino, and manufacturers. Catalyst Capital has been involved in food service since 2006 when it acquired in bankruptcy Richtree Market, the company that was the buyer of Super Fresh stores in 2011.

When Richtree/Natural Markets came to Washington, DC store employees agreed to a 10% wage reduction, the price for retaining the union as a bargaining agent. The current contract expires in June. Termination packages—if any-- have not yet been revealed.

Cashier Sally Crabbe is thankful that her health insurance continues until the end of the month as she is scheduled for cancer surgery before Christmas. Health plans for most employees termination January 1. Employees with long tenure include carry out assistants Donald Andrews, 27 years, and

Tim McLeod 22 years, and butcher Don Looney who has been with A & P and its successors for 50 years. The Spring Valley supermarket opened its doors in 1964.

The owners of the property, Robert and Paul Burka, attempted in a court filing to stop the Richtree/Natural Markets purchase. They argued that the Toronto firm had neither the experience nor the money to operate profitably.

Jeff Metzger, the publisher of Food World in Columbia, MD, wrote in 2011 that the Canadians had overpaid for the Super Fresh stores and that the operation “was doomed from the start.”

Matt Williams, then chief executive of Richtree/Natural Markets, assured employees and customers that the Spring Valley store would be extensively renovated, including the addition of a café and coffee bar. The promised renovations never occurred. #

No comments:

Post a Comment