Las Vegas Review-Journal

MOM-AND-POP BUSINESSES AMONG MOST ENDANGERED

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GROCERIES, FROM PAGE 1:

has focused on rural food access, erasing a bedrock of local economies just as rural communitie­s face a host of other problems.

In New York or Los Angeles, the loss of a favorite establishm­ent is an event to be mourned. But in this ranch town, where the closest reliably stocked market is 40 miles away, the threat to R&R Market raises questions about the community’s very survival.

Romero and his wife, Claudia, have worked in this shop seven days a week for 48 years, doling out bread and tamal flour, diapers and fishing rods, medicines and ranch tools. Now, they have reached their 70s and are trying desperatel­y to sell.

The problem is finding a buyer at a time when owning the local grocery is a high-risk endeavor, and when President Donald Trump’s budget proposal for 2018 calls for billions of dollars in cuts to aid for rural America, including programs like food stamps and business loans that help small groceries.

The White House has said the plan is intended to reduce the debt burden for future generation­s. But it has Republican­s and Democrats alike expressing fear for rural districts.

To visit San Luis is to enter a world that has persisted despite, or perhaps because of, the most extreme of circumstan­ces.

Six hundred forty-five people live in this village just north of the New Mexico border. Most bear the names of the Mexican settlers who came here in the tense days of the Wild West: Gallegos. Mondragon. Romero.

In town, residents still speak the Spanish of their ancestors. And on the outskirts, fields of alfalfa sip from an irrigation ditch that those settlers dug by hand.

This is high desert country, where a few inches of rain falls in a year, winters dip far below zero and the big city nearby is Alamosa, population 9,918. There is no bank, no gas line, and the electricit­y sometimes goes out for hours.

The market was built in 1857 by José Dario Gallegos, a merchant and Romero’s great-great-grandfathe­r, who turned his store into a hub. His descendant­s have operated it since, filling the shelves with vegetables, locally grown bolita beans and hand-packed chilies.

With few jobs available beyond farming and the two new marijuana shops on Main Street, a third of the town and two-thirds of the children live in poverty.romero and his wife offer food on credit, supply baptisms and funerals, cash checks, issue hunting licenses, pay local taxes. But they are exhausted. And yearning to retire.

“Claudia and I have given up our lives for this,” Romero, 71, said. He adjusted his now-gray ponytail and pulled out the pages of a novel he wants to finish writing.

“I don’t want to be `the one to break tradition,” he said. “But I can’t be here the rest of my life, either.”

Small markets across the country face similar challenges. Many of the men and women behind the cash registers have reached retirement age, and few people want to take over. Profit margins at independen­t groceries are slim, typically 1 to 2 percent, and last year a quarter of the independen­t markets surveyed by the National Grocers Associatio­n experience­d losses.

Customer bases are declining. The cost of upkeep can be overwhelmi­ng. Slow internet means inventory orders can take all day. Old refrigerat­ors suck up electricit­y and money.

Because San Luis has no natural gas line, residents use propane tanks or wood stoves, and Romero’s utility bills are now $1,300 a month.

Those who want to take on these stores can find it impossible to buy. If you’re poor — and many people in these towns are — and interested in a risky deal, few banks will give you a loan.

In recent years, some communitie­s have united to save their grocery. In Walsh, Colorado; Iola, Kansas; and Anita, Iowa, residents rescued their markets by forming cooperativ­es or public-private partnershi­ps.

Out on Nebraska’s prairie, the high school students in Cody came together to open Circle C Market in 2013, selling goods out of a building made of straw bales.

Here in San Luis, the Romeros are trying to sell their market and six upstairs apartments for $600,000, half of what an appraiser gave as its value.

Two sons have their own lives and little time for the town market. One, Steven, runs the family ranch — his contributi­on to the community. “The store and the culture and the farming and the landgohand­inhand,”hesaid.

Now, Romero is making peace with the fact that the shop could pass out of the family under his watch. If it stays open at all.

These days, when neighbors stop by, Romero leans in with a question.

“Want to buy a store?”

 ?? NICK COTE / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Some 645 people live in San Luis, the oldest town in Colorado, many of them still Spanish-speaking like their ancestors who settled here just north of the New Mexico border.
NICK COTE / THE NEW YORK TIMES Some 645 people live in San Luis, the oldest town in Colorado, many of them still Spanish-speaking like their ancestors who settled here just north of the New Mexico border.

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