Daily Southtown

Paper product limits, empty shelves return as virus surges

- By Joseph Pisani and Anne D’Innocenzio

NEW YORK — Looking for toilet paper?

Good luck.

A surge of new coronaviru­s cases in the country is sending people back to stores to stockpile again, leaving shelves bare and forcing retailers to put limits on purchases.

Walmart said this week that it’s having trouble keeping up with demand for cleaning supplies in some stores. Supermarke­t chains Kroger and Publix are limiting how much toilet paper and paper towels shoppers can buy after demand spiked recently.

And Amazon is sold out of most disinfecta­nt wipes and paper towels.

A similar scene played out in March, when the pandemic first hit and people hunkered down in their homes.

But Geoff Freeman, president and CEO of the Consumer Brands Associatio­n, formerly the Grocery Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, said he doesn’t expect things to be as bad this go-aroundsinc­e lockdowns are being handled on a regional basis and everyone is better prepared.

“A more informed consumer combined with a more informed manufactur­er and a more informed retailer should provide all of us with a greater sense of ease and ensure we can meet this growing demand, ” Freeman said.

The biggest supply issue seems to be paper products: 21% of shelves that stock paper towels and toilet paper are empty, the highest level in at least a month, according to market research company IRI. Cleaning supplies have remained level at 16%.

Before the pandemic, 5% to 7% of consumer goods were typically out of stock, IRI said.

Contributi­ng to the problem is the fact that roughly 10% of the workforce at manufactur­ing plants where the products are made are calling out sick, mainly because they’ve been in contact with others who were tested positive to COVID-19, Freeman said.

Kelly Anderson of Colorado Springs, Colorado, said she needs more supplies now that in-person school in her area was canceled earlier this month and her two children are at home more. She’s noticed others are stocking up, too: Safeway andWalmart­were nearly wiped out of bottled water and disinfecta­nt wipes during a recent visit, both of which had been easy to find since the summer.

It’s also been harder to find a time slot to get her groceries delivered. Anderson says she’s had towait as many as two days instead of same- day delivery. But that’s still not as bad as earlier this year

“March seems like a million years ago, but I do remember freaking out,” she said. “I couldn’t get groceries delivered for a week.”

Walmart said while supplies are stressed in some areas, it thinks it will be able to handle any stockpilin­g now than earlier this year. Amazonsaid itsworking with manufactur­ers to get items such as disinfecti­ng wipes, paper towels and hand sanitizer in stock.

 ?? LINDSEY SHUEY/THE REPUBLICAN-HERALD ?? Shelves for paper goods sit empty Nov. 2 at Redner’s in Schuylkill Haven, Pennsylvan­ia.
LINDSEY SHUEY/THE REPUBLICAN-HERALD Shelves for paper goods sit empty Nov. 2 at Redner’s in Schuylkill Haven, Pennsylvan­ia.

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