Hamilton Journal News

Family Dollar closes 3 Butler County stores

- By Cornelius Frolik and Eric Schwartzbe­rg Staff Writers

Three Butler County stores, two in Middletown and one in New Miami, are among the nearly three dozen Family Dollar stores the company has shuttered with more closures on the way.

Hundreds of Family Dollar stores are expected to close this year and hundreds more could close in the next several years. Already shut down are stores at 511 S. Breiel Blvd. in Middletown; 650 N. University Blvd in Middletown and 199 S. Riverside Drive in New Miami.

They are among 35 stores listed in a WARN notice issued to the Ohio Department of Job & Family Services by Michael Atcovitz, Dollar Tree’s vice president of human resources. The closures, which Atcovitz said were set to occur “on or about April 20,” were projected to impact about 265 employees across the state.

Ohio is home to more than 400 Family Dollar stores, including nine locations in Butler County.

Family Dollar and other dollar stores are controvers­ial, and some community members and hunger relief advocates say they have major downsides, such as they kill off the competitio­n from grocery stores and other businesses that sell more nutritious food products.

Research shows that food is one of the most commonly purchased items at dollar chain stores, but these stores usually do not offer a wide array of fresh fruits and vegetables, lean proteins or other items that contribute to a healthy, wholesome diet, said Joree Novotny, executive director of the Ohio Associatio­n of Foodbanks.

Dollar stores in some communitie­s pushed out grocery stores that sold a wider variety of fresh, wholesome and higher quality foods but that operated on very thin margins, Novotny said.

She said the proliferat­ion of dollar stores has contribute­d to a growing number of food deserts, plus declines in fresh fruit and vegetable access and consumptio­n.

Even so, Novotny said the statewide hunger relief network would see increased demand for food assistance in neighborho­ods where these stores close.

“If these dollar stores close, after contributi­ng to the loss of other food retailers in hard-to-serve communitie­s, the immediate impact will be negative for household food security in affected neighborho­ods and will require a collective response and significan­t public-private partnershi­p to ensure affordable access to wholesome foods longer-term,” she said. “In the short-term, people will suffer from even higher rates of food insecurity.”

Dollar stores tend to move into low-income urban and rural areas, but store closures in urban areas shouldn’t have that large of an impact because often there are other dollar stores or retail establishm­ents around, said Yasuyuki Motoyama, associate professor of city and regional planning at the Knowlton School at The Ohio State University.

Dollar store chains saw significan­t expansion in the last decade or longer, but there appears to be industry consolidat­ion taking place and the chains may be closing stores that are near other dollar store locations that aren’t as profitable, Motoyama said.

Motoyama also said store closures in semi-rural areas could result in a significan­t reduction in food access.

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