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New York Post
5 days ago
- Business
- New York Post
Zohran Mamdani's NYC grocery stores scheme draws fresh scrutiny as video of empty, city-owned Missouri market goes viral
He could be biting off more than he can chew. A viral video showing a desolate publicly-funded grocery store in Missouri has drawn fresh scrutiny on socialist mayoral contender Zohran Mamdani's signature proposal to bring city-owned markets to the Big Apple. The eerie footage showed virtually bare shelves inside the Kansas City, Miss. store, with local outlet KSHB 41 reporting this week that a rancid odor also wafted inside the shop. Advertisement 6 A viral video shows the poor conditions inside the city-owned Sun Fresh Market grocery store in Kansas City. KSHB 6 Empty shelves seen inside Sun Fresh Market. KSHB The lack of produce and other goods came despite the store being in a city-owned building and receiving millions of taxpayer dollars since opening in 2018, the report said. Advertisement 'I can tell you today right now it's damn near dead,' one outraged local told the outlet. Many viewed the video as prophetic for New York City, with one X user posting, 'Watch this, Mamdani supporters.' Mamdani helped clinch the Democratic mayoral nomination by running a campaign focused on affordability, including a promise to create a network of city-owned grocery stores to the Big Apple. 'It's like a public option for produce,' he said in one of his slick TikTok videos. 'We will redirect city funds from corporate supermarkets to city-owned grocery stores whose mission is to lower prices, not price gouging. Advertisement 'These stores will operate without a profit motive, or having to pay property taxes or rent, and will pass on those savings to you. They'll partner with small businesses and nearby farms and sell at wholesale prices.' 6 Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani has proposed opening city-owned grocery stores. Zohran Mamdani / TikTok The proposal inspired an explosion of handwringing among some New Yorkers, with some warning of Soviet-style groceries and billionaire John Catsimatidis threatening to close his Gristedes grocery chain. 'We can't compete with Mamdani opening city-run supermarkets for free,' Catsimatidis has told The Post. Advertisement But Mamdani's plan is largely vague on details, such as whether the city itself will actually run the stores or hand off operations to a private or nonprofit partner. He has interchangeably used the terms 'city-owned' and 'city-run' to describe the stores during his campaign. 6 A local TV station also reported a rancid smell in the Kansas City store. KSHB Mamdani said he envisions the initiative as a pilot program that's more of an experiment. 'That would be one store in each borough – five stores across New York City,' he said on 'The Bulwark' podcast. 'It would cost $65 million,' he said before the podcast host Tim Miller interrupted to jokingly call them 'five communist stores.' 'It might be an interesting test case to see how poorly it does compared to its neighbors,' Miller said. 6 Sun Fresh Market has recieved millions of dollars in taxpayer funds since opening in 2018, according to the report. KSHB Advertisement Mamdani contended that he was more interested in testing a potential practical policy than pushing an ideological agenda. 'No matter how you think about the idea, I do think that there should be room for reasonable policy experimentation in our cities and in our country, where we actually test out our ideas,' he said. 'And if they work, they work. And if they don't work, c'est la vie, then the idea was wrong.' The Queens assemblyman has pointed toward the government-owned grocery store in St. Paul, Kansas, a community of roughly 600 people, as a success story. Advertisement Brittain Ladd, a supply chain logistics and retail consultant, said government-run grocery stores in New York City could break even, but they could only offer a limited number of basic products and would need to be operated by grocery 'experts.' 6 The report noted a lack of fresh produce available in the city-owned grocery store. KSHB 'The program will fail if people who don't have expertise set it up,' Ladd said. 'These would be very specialized grocery stores. This would not look like a grocery store. It would be a very bare bones operation,' Ladd said. Advertisement 'It would be to really just provide the things that people need the most.' Nevin Cohen, director for the CUNY Urban Food Policy Institute, said Mamdani's proposal isn't so far-fetched, noting the city has six public retail markets, such as Jamaica Market, with a history going back to Mayor Fiorello La Guardia in the 1930s. 'They still operate in neighborhoods all across the city, and there, the Economic Development Corporation of New York City owns and manages the building and sets the rents so that there is a mix of neighborhood-serving vendors with rents that are affordable so they can provide low cost food,' Cohen said. Advertisement Cohen envisioned a public-private model would prevail if Mamdani wins in November and moves forward with the experiment, adding he didn't think city-owned grocery stores would impact existing businesses. 'In New York City, with 1,000 supermarkets, I don't think it's likely that the five public markets that Mamdani has been talking about would in any way undermine existing food retailers,' he said.
Yahoo
19-04-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Kansas City councilwoman wants to give $1.2M to Sun Fresh to prevent food desert
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City leaders want to avoid a food desert from evolving on the city's east side. One city councilmember hopes to help a struggling grocery store. The Sun Fresh Market at W. 31st and Prospect Avenue rests on city-controlled property that's been plagued with problems. Missouri Attorney General sues city of Kansas City over Sunshine request FOX4 spoke with Community Builders, the nonprofit that manages the Sun Fresh Market. Emmit Pierson, Jr., the group's CEO, said there isn't enough being done to fight drug deals and prostitution there. He said it's scaring off customers, and in turn, causing store shelves to go bare. On Friday morning, inventory at the store appeared to be low, with many displays and shelves having limited stock. Melissa Robinson, third district city councilmember, is proposing the city give $1.2 million to help the struggling store. Councilwoman Robinson introduced her ordinance during Thursday's city council meeting. 'If you don't have folks who are coming in and patronizing, how are you going to replenish the shelves?' Robinson asked. She said she hopes the money will enable store owners to upgrade their store, replenish their stock and improve security measures. Pierson said the store has been operating at a financial loss for the past two years. 'If you're not a full-line grocery store, you can't offer WIC,' she said. 'That's an important factor here. If we want that store to be viable…it's going to require a certain level of city subsidy.' The closest full-line grocery store, or supermarket, is at least a mile away from that location. Neighboring businesses think of that Sun Fresh store as being a retail hub and an anchor that draws customers. 'It brings good community; it brings a sense of togetherness,' said Marcus Craig, manager at the City Gear located across the street. 'You have all these different people and different ethnicities coming to make up this neighborhood. Each store has its essential elements to it.' Councilwoman Robinson also said that location sat empty for years before Sun Fresh took over. When the previous grocer moved out, the stores around it dried up, too. Some are concerned this could happen again if Sun Fresh isn't able to keep its doors open. The second reading of that proposed ordinance is expected to happen next Tuesday. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.