Save A Lot store opens in West Garfield Park as Yellow Banana dodges questions about lawsuits, finances

A line of eager shoppers snaked around the freshly-painted Save A Lot store in West Garfield Park on Thursday morning. Some customers waited more than three hours in the heat after word spread of a food giveaway at the grocery store, which had been closed for a year.

Save A Lot employees and officials from operator Yellow Banana handed out small bottles of water, $5 gift certificates and reusable bags filled with pantry food items.

“Everybody is basically here for the free giveaway,” said longtime resident Allen Richardson, who lined up at 7 a.m. “I was sad when the store closed. I had to go way down to [Fairplay Foods] miles away for groceries.”

A Save A Lot employee opens the doors as shoppers wait outside, with many lining up as early as 7 a.m.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Customers said they were happy to have the Save A Lot store back, after years of full-service grocers abandoning the area.

City leaders and Yellow Banana executives gave speeches before opening the doors shortly after 10 a.m., but some residents were impatient. “Open the store,” yelled several shoppers. Others yelled at suspected line-cutters.

The West Garfield Park location marks the first opening out of the six Save A Lots that are part of Yellow Banana’s city-funded $13.5 million deal. If the Ohio-based discount grocery operator opens all six stores by the city’s April deadline, it will receive the full $13.5 million in funding. The Englewood Save A Lot, which replaced a Whole Foods in 2023, is excluded from the city deal.

“To everyone who has seen this location change and transform, today is the day that we start a new beginning here in the West Garfield Park community,” Ald. Jason Ervine (28th) said. “You don’t have to leave to get fresh foods, vegetables and groceries.”

Chicago Department of Planning and Development Commissioner Ciere Boatright said in a news release that the city is looking forward to the reopening of its Morgan Park, South Chicago, South Shore, Auburn Gresham and West Lawn locations.

“Food security is essential to healthy neighborhoods, which is why the City is committing more than $13 million to support the six stores’ capital improvement needs,” Boatright said.

West Garfield Park resident Timothy Hamilton and his mother, Sharon, were first in line, waiting since 7 a.m.

“We’re waiting because he told us yesterday that the first 100 people get a free bag of food,” Timothy Hamilton said, pointing towards a Save A Lot employee.

Once inside, Timothy Hamilton said, “It’s better than it was last time. It used to not be stocked at all.”

Sharon Hamilton shops for items at the renovated Save A Lot in West Garfield Park.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Neighborhood grocery store

Many residents said the store’s reopening meant they no longer had to travel several miles for fresh food.

“We’re starving. It’s hard to get food right now,” said Kadedra Taylor, who traveled more than two miles to an Aldi after the Save A Lot closed. “I always spent my money here.”

By 11 a.m., the $5 gift certificates — part of a week full of daily giveaways — had run out. Lines inside the store grew as shoppers filled their carts with grocery items like spices and garlic bread.

Residents said the store looked and smelled better than before.

Miles Thomas had meat, eggs and frozen pizzas in his shopping cart. He said getting groceries has been “hectic, and he’d often go without groceries rather than spend all the time to travel for groceries.”

“They couldn’t have [opened] at a better time,” he said.

Minne Wilson doesn’t mind traveling for groceries, often taking the bus. But she said it can be difficult for older residents like herself to take public transit so sometimes she’ll take an Uber or rely on others who can drive her to the market. As a diabetic, she said she can find what she needs at Save A Lot’s produce section.

“I would rather come here than go anywhere else,” Wilson said.

Other shoppers beelined for the giveaway bags that had free items like ketchup, cookies, rice, chips, mayonnaise and canned green beans.

“It’s nice,” Anthony McClendon said. “I was looking for a little piece of meat in there or something though … but I really was just coming to see how it looked and it looks nice in there.”

The freezer section of the Save A Lot grocery store at 420 S. Pulaski Rd. ahead of its opening on Thursday.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Yellow Banana CEO Joseph Canfield and Save A Lot Chief Development Officer Bill Mayo told the Sun-Times during a store preview Wednesday that they’re excited to “prove themselves” to Chicago residents, who have complained about its expired food and dirty stores.

The renovated store at 420 S. Pulaski Road was expected to offer an updated shopping experience, after Yellow Banana closed it for renovations.

The site incorporates suggestions from residents like the addition of two organic produce items — baby spinach and lettuce. Fresh-cut turkey was also added at the urging of residents along with new floors and lighting, which add a “welcoming” aesthetic, according to Mayo.

Canfield said the biggest change at the store is the updated refrigeration, which previously caused “product integrity issues.”

He said the other five stores are expected to open by Thanksgiving.

Financial setbacks and store closures

In the past two years, Yellow Banana’s 38-store portfolio has shrunk to only include its Chicago locations. Stores outside of Chicago and in Ohio, Florida, Texas and Wisconsin have either closed or been taken over by Missouri-based Save A Lot.

“Save A Lot is the custodian and has taken financial and operational control of some of the stores,” Mayo said. “But that also has allowed Yellow Banana to really focus on Chicago.”

Canfield and Mayo didn’t want to talk about the challenges that have plagued Yellow Banana from missing store opening deadlines to the nearly $2 million in lawsuits filed by suppliers.

“We’re looking forward on things; we’re really not going to talk about things in the past,” Canfield said. “We don’t comment on any litigation. Any challenges we have with suppliers we are actively working through with them.”

The duo also declined to discuss what led to vendors like PepsiCo and Sherwood Food Distributors to file lawsuits against the company over unpaid bills. The new store didn’t appear to sell Coca-Cola, Pepsi and Frito-Lay products — all vendors that filed lawsuits against Yellow Banana.

“We’re trying to focus on getting this store open, opening up the other stores, getting in the market and being successful,” Mayo said. “We’re really looking forward. That’s really what our focus is.”

Vendors claim $950,000 remains unpaid in active lawsuits, according to court records. Other debt includes utility bills and more than $167,000 for property tax bills on six Chicago stores.

Canfield said the property tax bills are in the process of being paid.

Earlier this year, Yellow Banana transferred ownership of its 13 stores outside of Chicago to a new entity controlled by Save A Lot, records show. When asked about the change, Canfield said they “took on a lot.”

“We’ve got a big commitment in Chicago, and we really need to be able to deliver what we said. … There’s public tax dollars there,” he said. “We take that commitment very, very seriously. So we went to Save A Lot and said, ‘Hey, for us to focus on this, we should figure out a partnership here that’s going to allow this to move forward.’”

Contributing: Haley Bosek of WBEZ

Fresh produce and fruit is on display inside the renovated Save A Lot in West Garfield Park.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

More coverage
The West Garfield Park store is the first to open out of six locations that were part of Yellow Banana’s city-funded $13.5 million deal to offer South and West side residents more grocery options.
The city of Chicago made a $13.5 million deal with supermarket operator Yellow Banana, but the company has racked up $2 million in debts and shrunk to one open store amid lawsuits from creditors.
Yellow Banana is far from living up to its vow to get rid of the food deserts in some West and South Side neighborhoods.
In January, a Yellow Banana executive promised the city his company would improve after multiple delays opening stores in underserved South and West side communities.
The city of Chicago made a $13.5 million deal with supermarket operator Yellow Banana, but the company has racked up $2 million in debts and shrunk to one open store amid lawsuits from creditors.
Members of the Far Southeast Side neighborhood are discussing a potential pop-up grocery in the food desert.
The discount grocery store was originally slated to open in June 2023 but its opening was pushed back several times.
The Ohio-based company operates more than 30 Save A Lot stores nationwide, including in Chicago where a number of stores have yet to open.
The Black-owned online coffee company will open its first store at the former Whole Foods location by the end of this year.
The number of Chicagoans living over a mile away from a supermarket or superstore — a major grocer — has jumped by 63% in the past decade, a WBEZ-Chicago Sun-Times analysis found.
Yellow Banana, owner of the Save A Lot, plans to renovate the store, but local shoppers say the building needs to go after decades of rat infestation.
The store at 344 E. 63rd St. was shut because of property damage from a break-in reported Saturday, the company said. A sign at the low-cost grocery store urged customers to visit the Englewood Save A Lot less than 2 miles away.
A week after a contentious community forum during which residents said they did not want a Save A Lot, the store at 832 W. 63rd St. opened Thursday. “We thought it was best to open the doors and let the community decide for themselves on how they felt about things,” a company executive told the Sun-Times.
In a contentious community meeting Wednesday night, Save A Lot’s CEO tried to convince concerned community members that the low-cost grocer is ready to meet their shopping needs.
Owners of the grocery chain said they would meet with Ald. Stephanie Coleman (16th) and residents to address the community’s needs. A soft open is postponed.
Yellow Banana, an Ohio-based company that runs 38 Save A Lot stores, will move into the former Whole Foods building at 832 W. 63rd St.
A day after a Whole Foods closed in Englewood, it was heartening that a City Council committee green-lit a $13.5 million project to revive six Save A Lot grocery stores.
Ald. Jason Ervin (28th), chairman of the City Council’s Black Caucus, said the Save A Lot name that will be revived by stores operated by Yellow Banana has been seriously damaged by store closings.
Plans for the closed Gresham Save A Lot have been solidified, as Mayor Lori Lightfoot announces $13.5 million in grants to go toward Yellow Banana-owned stores, including the Gresham location.
Yellow Banana operates six Chicago-area Save A Lot stores, and wants to renovate and reopen the shuttered Gresham store. It would retain the Save A Lot name through the same licensing agreement as Yellow Banana’s other stores.
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