Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Some retailers end practice of locking up black beauty products

- BY ANNE D’INNOCENZIO AP Retail Writer

NEW YORK — Drugstore chains Walgreens and CVS Health say they will stop locking up beauty and hair care products aimed at black women and other women of color, joining Walmart in ending a practice at some stores that has drawn the ire of customers.

“We are currently ensuring multicultu­ral hair care and beauty products are not stored behind locked cases at any of our stores,” Walgreens said in a statement emailed to The Associated Press late Thursday.

Walmart on Wednesday said it would ban the practice, which took place at a dozen of its 4,700 stores and became the focus of a federal discrimina­tion lawsuit filed in 2018 that was dropped a year later.

Retailers are rethinking their merchandis­ing strategies in the wake of protests across the nation against police brutality and racial inequality following the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. While trying to undo discrimina­tory polices, they also realize they can’t afford to turn off multicultu­ral customers who are big spenders of beauty products. CVS noted that it’s grown its textured hair and cosmetics area by 35% over the past year, and many of those brands are black-owned businesses.

Many stores have had a longstandi­ng policy of locking up items that have high theft rates like batteries and razor blades. But experts say that locking up items catering to black customers, particular­ly in black neighborho­ods, is widespread and retailers need to abolish it. They also say that stores lock up more items in black neighborho­ods compared to white neighborho­ods.

“If you lock up products for black people and you aren’t doing that for products for white customers, that is discrimina­tory,” said Neil Saunders, managing director at GlobalData Retail. “It is out of step with the times we are living now.”

In 2018, Essie Grundy sued Walmart for locking up beauty items catering to black women. According to the complaint, Grundy went to the Walmart store in Perris, California, several times and had to ask a sales clerk to unlock the display case for black hair and body products. Meanwhile, beauty items for nonblacks were not under lock and key, according to the suit.

That experience is all too familiar for Kendra Bracken-Ferguson, a black digital marketing and social media leader in the retail and beauty space. She says she gets annoyed by long waits for the sales associates to unlock the beauty and personal care products not just at the local grocer Albertsons but at other neighborin­g stores in View Park in Los Angeles, known as the “Black Beverly Hills.” She says she doesn’t see those products locked up in Beverly Hills.

Bracken-Ferguson said she has stopped going to stores where this is still practiced.

“It sends a message of being prosecuted as soon as you walk in, disrespect­ed and generalize­d in a way that is psychologi­cal troubling because it is based on the race of your skin or where you live and nothing more,” she wrote.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/AP ?? Walgreens said in a statement, “We are currently ensuring multicultu­ral hair care and beauty products are not stored behind locked cases at any of our stores.”
GENE J. PUSKAR/AP Walgreens said in a statement, “We are currently ensuring multicultu­ral hair care and beauty products are not stored behind locked cases at any of our stores.”

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