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Grundy Reporter

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Illinois grocery stores struggle to meet consumer demands

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Grocery stores in Grundy County are doing their best to keep in-demand items in stock. | Pixabay

Grocery stores in Grundy County are doing their best to keep in-demand items in stock. | Pixabay

Grocery stores in Illinois are struggling to meet customers' demands as Gov. J.B. Pritzker's stay-at-home order continues to be in effect.

In Grundy County, several grocery stores are doing everything they can to provide enough supplies to the county, according to WCSJ News. They are not only doing their best to ensure customer demands are on hand, but stores are making changes to their practices as well. 

“Although the CDC does not require our team to use gloves or masks, we are actively sourcing personal protective equipment for our employees to use, upon request,” according to ALDI's website. “Disposable gloves have begun deploying this week and over the next week we will start to ship masks, as supplies permit.”

Other local grocery stores are ensuring their stores remain open, which will allow county residents to purchase the items and food they need during the pandemic, WCSJ News reported. 

"Our stores are working very hard to maintain in-stock conditions for all items," a statement on Jewel Osco's website said. "We ask for your patience since customer demand has been unusually high and many items have been selling out quickly." 

ALDI grocery stores are also working to keep their store fully stocked, according to WCSJ.

"We've been focusing all of our efforts on ensuring essential food and household goods are available, as we know our service to the community is critical during this unprecedented time," ALDI's website said, as reported by WCSJ News. 

Grocery stores are starting to limit the number of in-demand items customers can buy as well. Jewel Osco stores in the county are filling online orders, but are making limitations for the maximum quantity individuals can order online, the statement on the website said. 

“We’ve also instituted item limits for online orders (maximum quantity of 10 per item),” Jewel Osco said, as reported by WCSJ News. “We also ask you to respect in-store item quantity restrictions so all our customers have a chance to purchase the items they need.”

Other local grocery stores like Berkot's Super Foods are taking similar measures to ensure food and in-demand items remain stocked at their stores, WCSJ News reported. 

“Our stores continue to re-stock after the initial wave of buying has calmed,” the statement from Berkot's Super Foods indicated, reported WCSJ News. “We are focusing on cleaning and bringing our stores back to assemblance of normal.”

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