
Chicago says it hopes to open city-owned market instead of city-owned grocery store
A year-round public market, city officials said, would sell staple grocery items, such as milk and bread. The market would also contain retail spaces for local farmers and food retailers to sell their products, which the city said it would rent out at low cost.
Still, details are scarce about when such a market would open, how it would be funded and operated and where it would be located.
The announcement of the change in plans comes weeks after the Tribune reported the city did not apply for state funding for a public supermarket despite previously saying it would do so.
'This market will have almost like a multiplier effect in that we could support local entrepreneurs and food producers in our own neighborhoods that will essentially now have a place to sell their goods,' Deputy Mayor Kenya Merritt said in an interview. 'This model, I think, came out of a desire to be more impactful than just a public grocery store.'
Johnson's original proposal for a municipally owned grocery store was a bold one: No major U.S. city had opened a publicly owned supermarket, although the concept had found mixed success in several smaller municipalities and has since attracted interest in other big American cities, including in New York.
Proponents of the concept, including the mayor, said a city-owned store could help address the dearth of supermarkets in some neighborhoods on the city's South and West sides, where big grocery companies have shuttered store after store, leaving many residents with limited access to fresh groceries.
As recently as late August, the city planned to apply for state funding to help pay for a public grocery store in Chicago, after a feasibility study created for the city by private consultants found that such a store was 'necessary, feasible and implementable.' The city has not released the study to the public despite previously committing to doing so.
But in January, the Tribune reported city officials had not applied for state funding after filing a Freedom of Information Act request that revealed Chicago had not filed any applications for a grant under the $20 million Illinois Grocery Initiative.
The city could have secured up to $2.4 million for the project if it had applied — nowhere near enough to fund a new supermarket but a place to start.
In an interview last month, the city's chief operating officer, John Roberson, said the city 'really did not have anything to apply that money to in terms of a project, a shovel-ready project that was ready to go.'
The idea for the public market, Merritt said, came out of conversations with the Food Equity Council, a group of food system professionals who advise the city on food access issues.
In addition to the public market, the city plans to develop an 'incubator' program that will help provide training and apprenticeship opportunities for hopeful future grocery operators. The city said it also hopes to launch a program that will provide support in the form of funding and training to local food retailers.
Erika Allen, a co-chair of the Food Equity Council, said members of the group are aware of the challenges of the grocery business, which often operates on thin profit margins dependent on highly perishable inventory.
'For a city to sponsor that or run it didn't make sense to most of us,' said Allen, who is CEO of the Urban Growers Collective, an urban farming nonprofit based in Chicago. But it did make sense, she said, for the city to invest in infrastructure to support food access — like a public market.
'Our goal here is to stabilize food access,' Allen said.
'We're really looking at food security and food access as a basic human need,' she added.
Merritt said the city could not yet specify where a public market would be located, though she said the city was focused on the South and West sides.
The project could involve one market or multiple spots across different neighborhoods, Merritt said.
Merritt would not specify how much the city expects the market to cost or what specific funding sources the city, which is still projected to face a large budget deficit next year, would tap to bankroll it. Broadly, she said, the city expects to use a combination of city dollars, philanthropy and perhaps corporate partnerships to support the project financially. She said the city could not yet provide a specific timeline for when a market might open.
Merritt said the city is not sure whether it would operate the public market or contract with a third-party operator to manage the day-to-day running of the market.
In a presentation city staff shared with members of the Food Equity Council in November, they referenced public markets in three other cities — the North Market in Columbus, Ohio, Reading Terminal Market in Philadelphia and the Milwaukee Public Market.
Successful public markets are typically located in high-density, downtown areas of a city because they need lots of foot traffic to sustain themselves, said Andrew Lamas, a professor of urban studies at the University of Pennsylvania.
That raises questions, Lamas said, about whether a public market in Chicago will address the issue the city said it wanted to tackle when it floated the idea of a public supermarket: food deserts on the city's South and West sides.
The Reading Terminal Market, for instance, is located in downtown Philadelphia, near hotels, transportation arteries and a five-minute walk to City Hall. The publicly owned market is managed by a nonprofit that oversees its day-to-day operations, Lamas said. People who shop at the market are diverse, both in terms of race and class, Lamas said, even though many other public spaces in the city, such as public schools and transportation, are more segregated.
'That's valuable,' Lamas said. 'But it doesn't respond specifically to the food desert issue.'
Merritt emphasized that Chicago plans to open a market in a location where it would address a gap in food access. The market or markets would be located in public transit-accessible areas where there is community support for the project, she said. 'We envision these markets to become destinations that drive economic vitality in the community where they are located,' she said.
Lamas agreed that a public market is a more feasible model for the city to tackle than a supermarket. The benefit of a public market, he said, is that the risk inherent in a supermarket operation is spread across many different businesses.
'I think this is a better model,' for the city to attempt, he said. 'The problem is that it may not address the interests of low-income people.'
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Target's COO will lead the struggling retailer when CEO Brian Cornell steps down in February
Cornell said the appointment followed several years of board vetting of both internal and external candidates. Fiddelke has overhauled Target's supply network and expanded the company's stores and digital services while cutting costs. Advertisement 'Mike was the right candidate to lead our business back to growth,' Cornell told reporters. 'As I arrived at Target, I consistently relied on Michael's strategic insights and sound judgment when making decisions. Michael has developed a deeper knowledge of our business than anyone I know.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Fiddelke told reporters he's stepping into the role with 'urgency' to reclaim the company's merchandising authority. 'When we're leading with swagger in our merchandising authority, when we have swagger in our marketing, and we're setting the trend for retail, those are some of the moments I think that Target has been at its highest in my 20 years,' he said. In May, Target announced that Fiddelke would lead a new office focused on faster decision-making to help accelerate sales growth. The change in leadership was announced Wednesday at the same time that Target reported another quarter of sluggish results. The company's stock was down more than 8% in pre-market trading. Advertisement Target reported a 21% drop in net income in the quarter ended Aug. 2. Sales were down slightly and the company reported a 1.9% dip in comparable sales — those from established physical stores and online channels. Target has seen flat or declining comparable sales in eight out of the past 10 quarters including the latest period. Target, which has about 1,980 US stores, has been the focus of consumer boycotts since late January, when it joined rival Walmart and a number of other prominent American brands in scaling back corporate diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. Target's sales also have languished as customers defect to Walmart and off-price department store chains like TJ Maxx in search of lower prices. But many analysts think Target is stumbling because consumers no longer consider it the place to go for affordable but stylish products, a niche that long ago earned the retailer the jokingly posh nickname 'Tarzhay.' In fact, out of 35 merchandise categories that Target tracks, it gained or maintaining market share in only 14 during the latest quarter, Fiddelke told reporters Tuesday. Meanwhile, Walmart gained market share among households with incomes over $100,000 as US inflation caused consumer prices to rise rapidly. Lower-income shoppers have driven customer growth at Target, suggesting it may have lost appeal with wealthier customers, according to market research firm Consumer Edge. 'It's probably not the best sign, especially because higher-income consumers continue to hold up a little bit better' during times of economic uncertainty, said Consumer Edge Head of Insights Michael Gunther. Advertisement In March, members of Target's executive team told investors they planned to regain the chain's reputation for selling stylish goods at budget prices by expanding Target's lineup of store label brands and shortening the time it took to get new items from the idea stage to store shelves. The moves would help the company stay close to trends, executives said. 'In a world where we operate today, our guests are looking for Tarzhay,' Cornell told investors. 'Consumers coined that term decades ago to define how we elevate the everything everyday to something special, how we had unexpected fun in the shopping that would be otherwise routine.' Before joining Target, Cornell spent more than 30 years in leadership positions at retail and consumer-product companies, including as chief marketing officer at Safeway Inc. and CEO at Michaels, Walmart's Sam's Club and PepsiCo America Foods. He came to Target when the company was facing a different set of challenges. Cornell replaced former CEO Gregg Steinhafel, who stepped down nearly five months after Target disclosed a huge data breach in which hackers stole millions of customers' credit- and debit-card records. The theft badly damaged the chain's reputation and profits. Cornell reenergized sales by having his team rev up Target's store brands. It now has 40 private label brands in its portfolio. And even before the pandemic, Cornell spearheaded the company's mission to transform its stores into delivery hubs to cut down on costs and speed up deliveries. Target's 2017 acquisition of Shipt helped bolster the discounter's same-day, store-based fulfillment services. Cornell also focused on making its stores better tailored to the local community The coronavirus pandemic delivered outsized sales for Target as well as its peers as people stayed home and bought pajamas, furnishings and kitchen items. And it continued to see a surge in sales as shoppers emerged from their homes and went to stores. But the spending sprees eventually subsided. Advertisement As inflation started to spike, Target reported a 52% drop in profits during its 2022 first quarter compared with a year earlier. Purchases of big TVs and appliances that Americans loaded up on during the pandemic faded, leaving the retailer with excess inventory that had to be sold off. In July 2023, as shoppers feeling pinched by inflation curtailed their spending, Target said its comparable sales declined for the first time in six years. Moreover, Target started losing its edge as an authority on style by focusing too much on home furnishings basics, and not enough trendy items, Fiddelke said. A customer backlash over the annual line of LGBTQ+ Pride merchandise Target stores carried that year further cut into sales. Although Walmart retreated from its diversity initiatives first, Target has been the focus of more concerted consumer boycotts. Organizers have said they viewed Target's action as a greater betrayal because the company previously had held itself out as a champion of inclusion.