Posted on 01/28/2013 9:15:06 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
For Lafayette stockbroker Kenneth Daigle, buying a gallon of milk is no longer the bargain it used to be on Tuesdays at Fresh Market.
The upscale supermarket chain yanked milk from its $2.99 once-a-week promotion after a state auditor objected to the low price. A gallon of whole milk was priced at $5.69 Thursday at the Fresh Market in Perkins Rowe.
State Agriculture and Forestry Commissioner Mike Strain said Fresh Market violated state regulations by selling milk below cost as part of a promotion.
The supermarket routinely sells a gallon of skim, 1 percent, 2 percent or whole milk for $2.99 on Tuesdays, limiting the quantity to four per customer.
State law requires retailers markups to be no less than 6 percent of the invoice cost after adding freight charges.
The Dairy Stabilization Board oversees milk prices in Louisiana. The board was established after Schwegmann, a New Orleans-area grocery chain, launched a legal battle in the 1970s with the Louisiana Milk Commission to buy milk from out-of-state suppliers because it was cheaper.
The issue over Fresh Markets milk involves the cost of milk to consumers rather than the price paid to farmers.
They can sell it 6 percent over cost all day long. Its when they sell it below cost that it becomes a problem, Strain said.
During the second week of January, the price for a gallon of whole milk in Baton Rouge ranged from $4 to $6.89.
Strain said his office dispatched an auditor to the Fresh Market in Mandeville after receiving a complaint about the Tuesday promotion. His press office declined to identify the complainant.
During the visit, the auditor explained the regulations to store officials, Strain said.
Daigle learned about the change in price when he plunked down a gallon of milk at the cash register Tuesday at the Fresh Market two blocks from his office.
He routinely buys two gallons of milk at the sale price. He puts one gallon in the refrigerator and freezes the other.
This time, the milk rang up at the nonsale price. When Daigle questioned the price tag, the cashier told him the state had come down on the store.
Fresh Markets corporate headquarters referred media questions to the Atlanta-based BRAVE Public Relations.
BRAVE released a prepared statement from Drewry Sackett, Fresh Markets marketing, public relations and community relations manager.
Sackett said the promotion applied to the stores private label, rBST-free milk.
Because milk is a commodity product with regulated costs that are subject to change, at the current cost, due to Louisiana state law, we are unable to honor the $2.99 Tuesday deal for (Fresh Market) milk ... Because the cost of milk fluctuates, it is possible that we will be able to offer the $2.99 deal on milk again in the future, Sackett said.
Daigle said he is outraged that the state would intervene in order to control a retail stores prices.
Should we do the same thing with bread? Should we do the same thing with soft drinks? he asked.
Strain said the regulations exist to keep the price of milk as low as possible.
Allowing a supermarket to sell milk below cost could drive competitors out of business, allowing the store to then increase the price of milk, he said.
Daigle disagrees with Strains approach.
He said it is understandable for states to regulate the wholesale price, ensuring that farmers receive fair compensation for their labor.
Controlling the price on the grocery store shelf is heavy-handed, Daigle said.
If retailers want to take a loss, so be it, he said.
If a store wants to ‘loss leader’ a product they should be able to - no matter what the product.
There are many years during Thanksgiving where turkey prices are very high, there are stores that will sell turkeys for under their cost from distributors - it’s their loss leader price to get customers to hopefully shop the rest of the store for all their holiday needs.
Schwegmann’s was gone before Katrina...the last remnant of it was Schwegmann Bank.
The story I heard was that Schwegmann told the customers to save their receipts — when he got the law overturned, he would give the customers refunds. I don’t know if that is the 1970’s dispute or before.
Uh, no, it's when you poke your nose into things you don't understand and which are none of your business that it becomes a problem. Are they allowed to buy advertising? That's what they're doing by selling one or two products below their cost. They're doing their own advertising in house, and in a way that benefits the consumer instead of clogging his airwaves or mailbox.
Stores also sell milk and other perishables at lower prices when they're still good but nearing the point at which they'll have to be pulled from the shelves. If they can recover what they paid, or even most of it, that's a victory from their point of view.
If milk was the only product they sold, and they were continuously selling it at a loss, you might have reason to suspect they had some evil scheme working, but that's clearly not the case, you moron. Leave them alone!
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