Food Trade News

Bernie Kenny, ShopRites Of Delaware Founder, Dies At 85

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Bernard Francis “Bernie” Kenny Jr., founder and patriarch of Kenny Family ShopRites of Delaware, passed away December 30, 2023 at the age of 85.

Kenny was born and raised in Elizabeth, NJ, the son of the late Irene (LaValle) and Bernard F. Kenny. In lieu of a traditional educational path, Kenny left high school to join the United States Army. He earned the rank of Master Sergeant in the 101st Airborne before graduating from the elite Airborne Ranger School. His military service was a source of great pride throughout his life.

Kenny’s career in the grocery business began when he got his first job, at 12 years old, stringing up livestock in a freezer for a local butcher. He spent much of his career at Pathmark stores where he became a senior VP before acquiring two ShopRite stores in Delaware in 1995. Today, the Kenny Family operates six ShopRite stores in the First State.

Kenny is survived by his wife Peggy, whom he married in 1964. Together they raised six children, two natural and four adopted. They also served together as foster parents in New Jersey and Delaware, caring for 113 foster children between 1966 and 2019.

Kenny was a devout Catholic and an active member of St. Mary of the Assumption Church. He founded a nonprofit, Kenny Family Foundation, in 2009 and served as chairman until 2021. He contributed to countless charitable endeavors and service to others was a consistent focus of his life.

Most importantly, Kenny was a leader, a motivator and a source of inspiration. He lived his life with passion and a generosity of spirit that will be missed by everyone who was lucky enough to know him. His impact will live on through the lives that he touched and the lessons that he taught.

In addition to his wife, Kenny is survived by his brother Richard who was his closest friend and advisor; his sister-in-law Dorothy; his children and their spouses Kathleen (William), Thomas, Melissa (Mark), Christopher (Teresa), Matthew and Carlie; his grandchildren Joshua, Zachary, Amber, Autumn, Tyler, Brandon, Alyssa, Matthew, Brionna, Iris, and Lady; his great-grandchildren Jacelyn, Kylie, Liam, Rowan, Noah and Penelope; and his rescue dog Snoopy.

In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the Kenny Family Foundation – 501 South Walnut Street, Wilmington, DE 19801 or at www.kffde.org.

Price Chopper Emerges As Winner, Buys Five ShopRite Stores In Capital Region

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Schenectady, NY-based Price Chopper/Market 32 has agreed to purchase five Albany-area ShopRite stores and gas stations, after parent company Wakefern Food Corp. announced that it would be shuttering those units in October. The reason for the closures: underperformance. The five Capital Region units are owned by Wakefern subsidiary ShopRite Supermarkets (SRS). The stores, located in Albany, Colonie, Niskayuna, Slingerlands and North Greenbush, NY, had all closed by December 9. SRS opened its first store in the region (Niskayuna) in 2011.

In a letter to its suppliers Wakefern said: “When we entered this marketplace, we did so with an intent to provide an exceptional shopping experience to the customers. Today, due to changing market conditions and the influx of food retailers in the area, we are unable to maintain the level of sales needed to keep operating these locations. As a result, we’ve made the difficult decision to close the stores.”

About six weeks later, Price Chopper/Market 32, the supermarket share of market leader in the region, stepped up and announced that it had acquired the leases, store equipment and fixtures for all the closed locations. The stores that eventually reopen will be branded as Market 32 units, the company’s upscale format. They will not continue to operate gas stations.

The regional chain, which is owned by Northeast Grocers, Inc (which also operates Tops Markets), said it is still evaluating all its options, and confirmed that it plans to convert the current ShopRite stores in Niskayuna and North Greenbush into Market 32s. The Slingerlands location, which sits directly across the street from an existing Market 32, will be marketed for sublease. As for the Albany and Colonie locations, which are not too far from other existing Market 32 units, discussions with those landlords are continuing at presstime. The retailer said that all current associates will be prioritized in staffing whichever of the locations are ultimately occupied.

“Our Market 32 brand has been extremely well received, and this gives us an excellent opportunity to expand our footprint in the Capital Region, provide our customers with the shopping experience they are looking for and our teammates with career growth opportunities right here in our hometown,” noted Blaine Bringhurst, president of Price Chopper which was founded by the Golub family in 1932  “Price Chopper/Market 32 is excited at the prospect of growing scale right here in New York’s Capital Region, where we’ve been serving customers for more than 90 years. We have always been and will remain an employer of choice for our valued teammates. We are here to stay and will continue to invest in modernizing our stores, providing opportunities to our workforce, delivering an exceptional shopping experience to our customers, and supporting the community around us.”

Currently, Price Chopper/Market 32 operates 130 Price Chopper and Market 32 grocery stores and one Market Bistro, employing 18,000 associates in New York, Vermont, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire.

Longtime Shoppers Veteran Jim Bartkowiak Dies At 75

Jim Bartkowiak, the talented and personable dairy, frozen and ethnic category director at Shoppers Food, passed away on November 29 in Baltimore at the age of 75.

Beginning his career at A&P, Bartkowiak was a fixture in the Baltimore-Washington retail food trade for 51 years. He spent the last 37 years of his career at Shoppers where he helped build the modern foundation of that regional chain’s dairy and frozen departments.

While at Shoppers, Bartkowiak was known to be a student of the dairy-related commodities market, keenly focusing on lowering the cost of goods. In frozen, he prioritized variety and selection and prided himself on Shoppers having the largest ice cream assortment in the market.

When the ethnic category began to grow, Bartkowiak saw a real opportunity with Shoppers’ diverse customer base and worked hard to expand the department’s variety, helping the ethnic department become one of the cornerstones of Shoppers’ total business.

Jim Bartkowiak was raised in the Highlandtown section of Baltimore and later served his country in Vietnam. He was a big fan of both the Orioles and Ravens and was extremely dedicated to his family, attending many of his children’s activities as they grew up.

He leaves behind his wife Vera (nee Galford), children Angela J. Bergamy and her husband Don, Valerie J. Gaigler and her husband Charles, James R. Bartkowiak Jr. and his wife Katie,; Michael P. Bartkowiak and Kevin C. Bartkowiak; grandchildren Donnie Bergamy, Terra Cymek, Kera and Brooke Gaigler, James R. Bartkowiak III; great grandchildren Josephine Bergamy; sister Beverly Parrog and her husband Lou; as well as other loving relatives and friends.

Wakefern, C&S, UNFI, Bozzuto’s Remain Top Wholesalers As Margins Decline

The wholesale grocery business continued to be more challenging as the number of independent grocers dwindled and food distributors faced rising infrastructure costs – labor and fuel in particular. Pressure also came from inflation moderation as prices have somewhat stabilized after two years of benefiting from price hikes which wholesalers told us helped produce higher gross margins.

The Mid-Atlantic market leader remained member-owned Wakefern Food Corp., the largest wholesale grocery co-op in the country. The Keasbey, NJ-based co-op rang up a record $15.1 billion in wholesale volume (up from $14.4 billion last year) which was generated primarily through the success of its nearly 400 retail supermarkets operating under the ShopRite, Price Rite Marketplace, The Fresh Grocer, Dearborn Market, Fairway Market and Gourmet Garage banners. Wakefern’s market area covers New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island, and includes dominant positions in the large Metro New York and Delaware Valley markets. Internally, changes continued at the big wholesaler, led by the appointment of Mike Stigers as president. The former Safeway and UNFI executive joined Wakefern in June, replacing Joe Sheridan, who will be retiring at the end of the year after serving Wakefern for nearly 48 years, the past 14 as president. Also stepping down after 18 years as chairman of Wakefern was Joe Colalillo, owner/operator of five high-volume ShopRite stress in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Replacing Colalillo will be Sean McMenamin, whose family operates two ShopRites in Philadelphia.

C&S Wholesale Grocers, the nation’s largest privately-owned voluntary wholesaler, ranked second among all retail distributors in the Mid-Atlantic region with estimated annual sales of $12.1 billion. It was another active year for the Keene, NH-based distributor on the executive level. Chief executive Bob Palmer retired after more than 30 years at C&S, the past three years as the company’s day-to-day leader (he will remain on the board of directors). Replacing Palmer was Eric Winn, who joined the national wholesaler in 2004 and was promoted from COO to CEO, taking the helm in October. Externally, there was equally big news – C&S agreed to acquire 413 Albertsons and Kroger stores in 17 states and Washington, DC. The deal was fueled by divestiture requirements after the two big chains announced an agreement to merge more than a year ago. Also included in the deal were eight distribution centers, two office complexes and the licensing rights to the Albertsons name in several markets for $1.9 billion. That deal is not yet finalized and another 237 Albertsons and Kroger stores could be added, depending on divestiture demands from the Federal Trade Commission.

There is no way of sugar-coating this: UNFI had a poor year, particularly in its past two operating quarters. And next year promises to be no better with CEO Sandy Douglas predicting more red ink. Nationally, that manifested a corporate restructuring where longtime president Chris Testa (a holdover from the Steve Spinner regime) departed and Douglas assumed both titles. Also leaving was the aforementioned Mike Stigers (president of the company’s retail unit consisting of Cub Foods and Shopper Food) who joined Wakefern as its president. Last month, former Rite Aid executive Andre Persaud was named to lead UNFI’s retail operations. Other executive changes in 2023 include the hiring of Erin Horvath as COO and Kelly Sosa as president of the company’s Atlantic division earlier this year. A few months later, Sosa, a former C&S exec, was named president of UNFI’s newly created Eastern division which includes oversight of 22 distribution centers ranging from Maine to Florida to as far west as Tennessee. While UNFI’s balance sheet issues can be tangibly assessed, its intangibles also suffered, particularly in  the eyes of some in its prolific independent retailer base which includes Key Food, Redner’s, B. Green, Karns, Associated Supermarket Group (ASG), Graul’s, Murphy’s and McCaffrey’s. Owners at several of those companies have noted that over the past 18 months UNFI has underperformed in many of aspects of its business – warehousing and logistics, private label execution and customer service. Still, UNFI remains a powerful distribution force with estimated annual sales of $10.4 billion.

Two of the largest national convenience store wholesalers – McLane and Core-Mark – dominated c-store distribution in the region. McLane’s 12 warehouses serving more than 6,000 stores (including many 7-Elevens) amassed estimated regional sales of $3.15 billion; and Core-Mark, which became a division of Performance Food Group in 2021, supplied nearly 3,000 c-stores and amassed estimated annual wholesale sales of $3.1 billion in the region.

Family-owned wholesale grocers, the genesis of virtually all grocery distribution, remained an important part of the landscape, despite continuing industry consolidation on a national basis.

Bozzuto’s, owned by the Bozzuto family, continued its tradition of strong customer service and innovation. The Cheshire, CT-based wholesaler serviced 1,180 independent stores, many of which fly the IGA banner, and rang up wholesale sales of $2.6 billion in 2023.

Merchant Distributors, Inc. (MDI), another family-owned distributor, remained the leading wholesaler in the Southeast, serving more than 700 stores (including Lowes Foods, the regional chain of nearly 100 stores that parent firm Alex Lee owns). Annual wholesale volume is estimated at $2.16 billion for the Hickory, NC-based firm which in recent years has expanded its independent retailers bases deeper into the Mid-Atlantic.

Two metro New York based distributors – Krasdale (owned by the Krasne family since 1908) and General Trading (owned by the Abad family) – also showed positive growth during 2023.

Krasdale Foods, based in White Plains, NY (with a distribution center in the Bronx), supplied many independent retailers under such banners as AIM, Bravo, C-Town, Market Fresh, Shop Smart and Stop 1 – whose combined sales paced all independent retailers in the five boroughs of New York City. All told, the company serviced approximately 3,050 stores in the metro New York and Philadelphia markets and accrued estimated sales of $1.7 billion this year.

General Trading, based in Carlstadt, NJ, also serviced many independent merchants doing business in the areas in and surrounding New York City. Of the company’s nearly 3,500 stores it supplied, many were ethnic and specialty customers. Annual wholesale revenue is estimated to be $686 million.

Of all the classes of trade, nobody performed better than the three large club operators, which performed well nationally and regionally. We have broken out store counts and estimated sales for those units which operate in our coverage area. The nation’s largest club store operator – Costco – once led the pack in the Mid-Atlantic with 78 stores and an estimated $7.5 billion in annual sales (extrapolated to include only food and related products). Although its financial progress has begun to slow, BJ’s Wholesale had another strong year. The Marlborough, MA club merchant operated the most wholesale clubs in the region  – 109 – which produced annual estimated extrapolated sales of $6.6 billion. BJ’s also gave CEO Bob Eddy expanded duties, naming him chairman, too. Former CEO and chairman emeritus Chris Baldwin will remain on the board. Second-ranked nationally club store retailer Sam’s Club’s 45 stores amassed $2.06 billion in estimated extrapolated volume this year.

Maryland Retailers Alliance Inducts 6 New Members Into Hall Of Fame

The Maryland Retailers Alliance has inducted four grocery industry executives, a local politician who worked closely with the food industry, and an iconic Maryland company into its Hall of Fame. The honorees were honored at a breakfast held last month at Martin’s Caterer’s in Baltimore.

Phil Tulkoff, Tulkoff Food Products, has led the Baltimore-based manufacturer to new heights in the 19 years he has served as president and CEO. The company’s history dates back to 1925 when Harry and Lena Tulkoff operated a produce stand in Baltimore City. As their business grew, the company began to focus on their prepared horseradish which is still a hallmark of the business.

Since becoming president and chief executive in 2005, Phil Tulkoff has sold their longstanding property on Brewer’s Hill in Baltimore and expanded operations to a new facility in Baltimore’s Holbird Business Park. Tulkoff was also responsible for the opening of a new manufacturing facility in Cincinnati, OH and expanded the company’s business into co-packing which now encompasses more than 50 percent of its business. In recent years, Tulkoff’s has also broadened its product selection to include flavored sauces, garlics, garlic spreads, butters and sauces, ginger and herbed sauces.

Maryland native Kurt Schertle began his career at Metro Food Markets in Baltimore. That company and its Basics subsidiary were acquired by Shoppers Food & Pharmacy (Shoppers Food) where he rose through the ranks from store manager to senior VP-marketing & merchandising.

In 2009, Schertle joined Sunbury, PA-based region grocery chain Weis Markets as VP-sales and merchandising. Currently, he serves the large Mid-Atlantic retailer as its chief operating officer and he oversees all aspects of the company’s marketing, merchandising, procurement, advertising, store operations, information technology and supply chain, including its distribution and transportation teams. When Schertle joined Weis 14 years ago, the retailer’s annual volume was $2.5 billion. Through organic growth and several acquisitions, current annual sales are $4.8 billion.

Business partners David Green and Melvin Shapiro have collectively been in the retail and wholesale grocery industry for more than 100 years and both started working in their families’ businesses – Green at B. Green & Company and Shapiro at Baltimore-based independent retailer Food Town. For the past 27 years, they have owned D&M Management Services which operates 11 Save A Lot discount stores in Maryland, West Virginia and Virginia (their first store was located in Hancock, MD) and employs approximately 230 associates. Green has been active with the original Maryland Food Dealers Association (which later merged with the Maryland Retailers Alliance) since 1976.

This year’s political inductee was recently retired Maryland State Senator Delores Kelley. She was first elected to the Maryland House of Delegates in 1990, representing parts of Baltimore City and Baltimore County in the 42nd District from January 1991 to January 1995. She was elected to the Maryland Senate to represent Baltimore County in District 10 in 1994 and served in that seat from January 1995 until her retirement in January 2023. During her time in office, she served on several legislative committees and was chair of the Senate finance committee from 2019-2023. Kelley served on many state commissions and task forces while in office and was heavily involved with the state Democratic party and state and local central committees. In  addition to her leadership and guidance to the Maryland Retailers Alliance, Senator Kelley has been recognized and awarded by several non-profit organizations including the Maryland Commission for Women, the Maryland Foster Care Review Board, YWCA of Greater Baltimore, and the Domestic Violence Network of Maryland. She was chosen for the First Citizen Award from the Maryland Senate in 2017.

The Baltimore Coffee & Tea Co. (BCT) is the 2023 Hall of Fame recipient for local manufacturing. The company was founded in 1992 by partners Norman Loverde and Stanley Constantine. With a family history in the coffee and tea business dating back to 1895, Loverde and Constantine’s vision was to import and purvey the freshest, most authentic coffee and tea possible. The initial retail roastery quickly grew into a major player in the Maryland area, operating four divisions: retail coffee and tea, wholesale C\coffee manufacturing, ecommerce coffee and tea, and Wholesale Eastern Shore Tea Co. for tea manufacturing. BCT’s retail stores offer 120 varieties of freshly roasted coffee, available in regular, Swiss water process decaffeinated, flavored coffee, and certified fair trade organic coffee. The company’s tea selection of more than 1,000 varieties is reportedly the largest in the country. In addition, breakfast and lunch offerings, coffee and tea accessories, preserves, and gourmet packaged foods are also offered for retail sale. The company currently operates manufacturing  retail facilities in Timonium, MD. and retail stores in Frederick, Annapolis, and Odenton, MD. The company also sells their products worldwide online and employs more than 100 people.

Joe Fantozzi Confirmed As President, COO Of Allegiance Retail Services

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Allegiance Retail Services, LLC, the supermarket services co-operative based in Iselin, NJ, has officially named Joe Fantozzi as its president and COO. Since September, Fantozzi has held the title of interim president and COO after former president and chief operating officer John Derderian stepped down to assume a reduced role.

Louis Scaduto Jr., chairman and CEO of Allegiance, stated, “As communicated in August, I empaneled a sub-committee of the board of directors to conduct a search for a permanent replacement. After engaging a professional recruiting firm, and conducting multiple interviews and assessments, the sub-committee was unanimous in their recommendation that Mr. Fantozzi be appointed as the president and chief operating officer of Allegiance Retail Services, LLC and Foodtown, Inc., effective immediately. The boards of Allegiance and Foodtown have formally accepted and acted upon the recommendation of the sub-committee. Mr. Fantozzi will also be appointed to the board of managers of Allegiance and the board of directors of Foodtown in his capacity as president. His many accomplishments at the cooperative to date, and his keen understanding of what is required to create a platform of success for the independent supermarket operator was of primary consideration.”

Fantozzi, a native of New Jersey, has spent his career in the grocery business. He began as an entry level employee for wholesale grocer White Rose in 1979. Rising through the ranks at the Carteret, NJ distributor, he was named president and COO in 2008. Shortly after White Rose folded, Fantozzi joined Allegiance as VP-customer development in 2016 before being promoted to CFO in 2020.

ADUSA Will Sell FreshDirect To Ultrafast Delivery Service Getir

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The honeymoon didn’t last long. Twenty-two months after it acquired New York City-based online fresh-oriented retailer FreshDirect, Ahold Delhaize has agreed to sell the company. The buyer is Getir, an Istanbul, Turkey-based ultrafast grocery delivery service which operates in several key U.S. markets (New York, Chicago, Boston) as well as in the U.K., Germany, The Netherlands and in its home country. It was founded in 2015. The deal is expected to close later this month, but financial terms have not been released. It is estimated that FreshDirect’s annual sales are in the $800 million range.

Ahold Delhaize acquired 80 percent of Fresh Direct, founded in 2002, from private equity investors in January 2021 (investment firm Centerbridge Partners purchased the remaining 20 percent).

At the time, chief executive Frans Muller said: “FreshDirect is a leading local brand in the fast-growing online grocery sector in the New York City metro area, one of the most important ecommerce food markets in the United States. With its unparalleled quality of fresh food, exceptional brand recognition, and dedicated people, it has generated remarkable customer loyalty. This acquisition further propels our omni-channel evolution. It is a great addition and fit for our portfolio of leading local brands. The deal allows us to reach additional customers in the New York trade area and therefore will add incremental sales to the business. It further enables us to address customers’ growing preference for convenient ways to shop. Finally, we are excited to have Centerbridge alongside of us in this venture and believe our combined focus, expertise, and scale will help us maximize the success of FreshDirect going forward.”

The purchase price was reportedly $408 million (the Ahold Delhaize share cost the company approximately $327 million) and the strategy at the time was to bolt on to the Dutch retailer’s growing digital business, which had seen significant growth during the previous 18 months, primarily due to the sales tailwinds from COVID.

However, even after dominating the Manhattan online retail food market for many years, the company found profitability challenging. When it relocated its corporate headquarters from Long Island City in Queens to a new 400,000 square foot automated depot in the Bronx in 2018, it slowly began to make money. Subsequently it expanded beyond the Metro New York City and began delivering to parts of the Philadelphia and Washington DC markets. Both of those marketing areas were eliminated by Ahold Delhaize in August 2022 as was as a distribution center in Capitol Heights, MD.

JJ Fleeman, Ahold Delhaize USA’s chief executive, said the decision to sell the FreshDirect business was to focus investments in its omnichannel businesses. “This was a difficult decision, especially given FreshDirect’s rich history in the New York City area,” said Fleeman, who took the helm of the Dutch retailer’s U.S. operations in April. “However, our strength as a grocery retailer in the U.S. is the true omnichannel experience – a combination of online and in-store – where we have leading brands and market share, strong store density and online presence, and a deep heritage of customer loyalty and relationships. With this decision, we will increase our focus on omnichannel – our biggest growth opportunity.”

“We are proud of the positive impact FreshDirect has had in the online grocery space, raising the bar in offering the best in-season selection of locally sourced goods,” added Fleeman. “In the coming weeks, we are committed to supporting a smooth transition for FreshDirect’s valued employees, customers, partners and communities, who have been loyal to the brand over the past 20 years, so that FreshDirect will be well positioned to continue as an integral part of New York’s food culture under Getir’s ownership.”
FreshDirect currently employs approximately 3,200 associates and ADUSA said there will not be any disruption of service as a result of the sale.

In assessing its focus on its omnichannel investments, it’s curious that a company that considers digital/online to be such an important component of its entire omnichannel experience has closed two large fulfillment centers in the past five months (Jersey City, NJ and Hanover, MD) and now is selling an asset that, less than three years ago, was considered a building block in the retailer’s growth strategy.

Giant, Safeway Clerks Approve New 4-Year Labor Agreements

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More than 27,000 clerks and meatcutters from Giant Food and Safeway agreed to new four-year labor contracts earlier this month. Unlike in 2019, when both chains and United Food and Commercial Workers Locals 400 (Washington area) and 27 (Baltimore area and the Eastern Shore) crafted a new pension plan to replace the grossly underfunded ($1.1 billion in liabilities with the risk of oncoming insolvency) original FELRA (Food Employers Labor Relations Association) trust, these negotiations focused primarily on wage increases.

UFCW members felt that the risks they faced in the stores, coupled with a spiraling rate of inflation over the past three years, warranted a major wage boost from both chains. And even though bargaining was slow at the outset and a strike authorization vote was approved at one point, all parties ultimately agreed on a comprehensive 48-month deal. After a vote, the contracts were authorized on November 6.

In the new agreement, top-rated food clerks who were hired prior to March 5, 2020, the official signing of the last agreement, will get annual raises of $1.10 per hour the first year and $1.00 per hour each subsequent year.

For full-time and part-time service clerks hired on or after March 5, 2020, their annual wage increases will be $0.50, $0.30, $0.30 and $0.25 cents an hour consecutively per year of the contract.

Additionally, department heads will receive an additional $0.25 per hour for the first two years. Bakery, pharmacy floor, front end seafood and the pickup managers (Giant only), a new classification will see their hourly pay raised from $19.00 to $20.00. Meat, grocery, deli and produce managers will receive a $0.50 hourly pay bump to $21.00.

There were no changes in healthcare coverage for the life of the contract, and no increases in premium, co-pays or deductibles.

However, both Giant and Safeway will experience about a 19 percent premium increase over the four-year deal for full-time “tier 1” employees, who represent the most tenured associates for each retailer. For “tier 1” part-time associates, the premium contributions will increase approximately 65 percent.

Vacation policies remained intact from the previous deal in all classifications except for those associates who have achieved 12 years of employment. Those clerks and meatcutters will now qualify for four weeks of paid vacation, a reduction of one year from the previous pact.

After the 2019 agreement which created a new pension plan, there were a few tweaks made going forward with the new agreements. During the first year of the contract, at the request of either party, the companies and unions will meet to discuss the merger of the variable annuity funds for each retailer into one multi-employer plan and/or termination of the excess plan to yield savings from PBGC (Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation) premiums and administrative expenses with the goal of reallocating expenses to benefit improvements. The raise variable annuity plan ceiling will be raised from nine percent to 10 percent. Both Giant Food and Safeway will be required to make monthly contributions to the fund.

Going into the bargaining, both sides made it clear that, fueled by the large increase in retail theft and organized crime, employee safety needed to be addressed in the new contracts. As such, Locals 400 and 27 and Giant and Safeway have agreed to meet at the request of either party to discuss training, procedures and protocols to protect employees in case of a shooting or other violent attack or emergency that can affect employee safety.

The four-year contract officially runs from October 29, 2023 through October 30, 2027.

 

The Giant Company’s John Ruane Named 2023 Pete Manos Awardee

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John Ruane, president of The Giant Company, has been named the 2023 recipient of the Food World/Food Trade News “Pete Manos Retail Executive of the Year” award.

The annual award was first presented to the late Giant Food chairman and chief executive upon his retirement in 1999 and was subsequently named after him. Manos spent his entire 39-year career with Giant Food and passed away in 2016. The award is given to a food industry executive annually, in recognition of distinguished industry service, leadership and community involvement.

Ruane was recognized with the award at a breakfast meeting held November 8 at Martin’s West in Baltimore in conjunction with the Maryland Retailer Association’s (MRA) food industry Hall of Fame induction ceremony.

Ruane began his grocery career for Hy Shulman at a Foodtown store in Caldwell, NJ at age 14 and continued working there through college. In 1980, he joined Pathmark, working his way through roles of increasing responsibility from part-time clerk to senior vice president of merchandising.

Ruane joined the Ahold Delhaize family of brands in 2011 as sales vice president of Stop & Shop’s New York Division and then was named senior vice president of fresh for Ahold USA where he oversaw all fresh merchandising and supply chain operations for more than 800 stores.

He joined The Giant Company in 2018 as senior vice president of merchandising and was named senior vice president of commercial in July 2022. Ruane was named interim president in August 2022 and became president in July 2023.

Ruane currently serves as chairman of FMI -The Food Industry Association’s fresh food leadership committee and on the board of directors for Philabundance. He attended Rutgers College and has completed post-graduate programs at Cornell University and Harvard Business School.

Previous winners of the “Manos” award include last year’s winner, Jim Perkins, Albertsons; Nicholas Bertram, The Giant Company; Jeff Brown, Brown’s ShopRites; Ron Dennis, Farm Fresh; Benjy Green, B. Green & Co.; Ira Kress, Giant Food; Jim McCaffrey III, McCaffrey’s Markets; Fred Morganthall, Harris Teeter; Kurt Schertle, Weis Markets; Carl Schlicker, Ahold USA; Danny Wegman, Wegmans; the late Robert Weis, Weis Markets; and Bill White, Shoppers.

Children’s Cancer Foundation 40th Annual Gala

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