Shelby Park's Save-A-Lot closed with little warning to neighbors
The Courier Journal's continued coverage of food insecurity in Louisville is supported by the University of Southern California Center for Health Journalism's 2018 National Fellowship.
Other stories in this series include:
Tell us: How do you get food where you live in Louisville?
Dare to Care relocation may bring job training, grocery to the West End
Shelby Park's Save-A-Lot closed with little warning to neighbors
Sorry, we're closed: How everyone is hurt when grocery stores shut down
In 30 seconds: What you should know about food deserts in Louisville
Tuition or food? How college kids use food pantries to help food insecurity
Louisville has a fresh food problem. Can we fix it?
'A real crisis in Louisville': Readers respond to food desert series
How a low-income Louisville neighborhood became a fresh food oasis
How can cities end food deserts? Here are 4 solutions that worked
Louisville families shouldn't be struggling to find fresh food
No grocery store in your neighborhood? Join forces to create one
People can't get to a grocery store easily. So these volunteers are driving them
Would you shop at a mobile grocery store? Kroger is betting on it
Where You Live Determines How Much Your Eggs Cost at Kroger
How some residents get their food in Louisville's food deserts
Louisville's vacant grocery stores find new tenants. But they won't sell food
How these Louisville companies are helping employees buy affordable fresh produce
Can indoor farming fix food deserts? These Louisville students think so
Kentucky's hunger initiative earns national attention. But thousands still need food
Downtown Louisville is growing rapidly. So why doesn't it have a grocery store?
Is crime driving grocery stores out of Louisville's low-income communities?
Louisville kids are still at risk for lead poisoning. Here's how healthy eating can help
When will downtown Louisville get a grocery store? Here's what we found
Everything you need to know about Kroger's mobile grocery store in Louisville
Kroger's mobile market brings fresh food to Louisville neighborhoods without access
This nonprofit leader is giving west Louisville the black-owned grocery it 'deserves'
(Photo Credit: Alton Strupp/Courier Journal)
A discount grocery store in the Shelby Park neighborhood closed Sunday with little warning after its parent company, Buehler Inc., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
On Monday, a representative for the company confirmed that it had closed three stores as a result of the filing — including the local Save-A-Lot at 1311 S. Shelby St., which opened its doors in 2008.
Buehler Inc. of Jasper, Indiana will still operate two stores in Louisville: a Cash Saver in Park DuValle and a Save-A-Lot on Cane Run Road. Administrative assistant Michelle Schmitt said those stores are not in danger of closing, as far as she is aware.
Employees were busy Monday clearing out the closed store and referred all questions to the Indiana office.
Inside, refrigerated cases that once held meat had already been emptied and a shelf holding bags of Doritos was one of the last to remain stocked. Outside, a couple who was not aware of the store's closure asked why the neighborhood had not been given more notice.
Residents of Shelby Park have long bemoaned their lack of options for healthy and affordable food, and those who shopped at the Save-A-Lot will likely have to travel a mile farther to the Kroger at Eastern Parkway and Goss Avenue to get what they need.
One bright spot on the horizon: Safai's Logan Street Market is on track for a spring opening. And it promises to sell an assortment of goods that anyone can afford.
Bailey Loosemore: 502-582-4646; bloosemore@courier-journal.com; Twitter: @bloosemore. Support strong local journalism by subscribing today:https://www.courier-journal.com/baileyl.
[This story was originally published by Courier Journal.]