Orlando Sentinel

Stoneman Douglas victim’s father decries Publix action

- By Lisa J. Huriash Staff Writer

A father of a victim of the Stoneman Douglas high massacre says the controvers­y over Publix and its political contributi­ons isn’t over. Fred Guttenberg, whose daughter was fatally shot in the Feb. 14 attack, said he asked Todd Jones, president and CEO of Publix Super Markets Inc., to visit Parkland to talk with the students, and for Publix to donate to its victims’ fund.

Last week, students demanded a boycott of Publix and then staged a “die-in” in response to the supermarke­t’s political contributi­ons to gubernator­ial candidate Adam Putnam, a self-proclaimed “proud #NRASellout.” The supermarke­t chain became a target after a media report that Putnam had received $670,000 over the past three years from the company.

Minutes before demonstrat­ors protested inside stores Friday, Publix announced it was suspending political contributi­ons. But Tuesday, Guttenberg said he was angered by Jones’ recent response. He said the CEO wouldn’t agree to a Parkland visit or donate to the victims’ fund. “That is the right of Publix to make a decision like that, but I also have the right to call it out,” he tweeted.

He said Jones “had the gall to say to me that because the die in made this so political that he would not be able to come down here to meet with the Parkland kids and families, as a reminder we are customers, and that Publix would not be making any donation to the victims fund.”

Guttenberg told the South Florida Sun Sentinel the students’ actions could’ve been avoided if the company would speak to the people affected. “We love Publix… [But] Publix has done something really offensive to us,” he said.

Tuesday night, spokeswoma­n Nicole Krauss said Publix worked on several projects, including a garden for a culinary program, beautifica­tion of common grounds and sodding and landscapin­g a new yoga/meditation area for the students. “We hoped our efforts would help the students find comfort in each other and a peaceful place to reflect and meditate,” she said.

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