News


Woodlawn, Bronx, supermarket to close much to the dismay of local Irish

"Little Ireland's" Woodlawn Heights Grocery Store to close


John McGrath and Shawn Nealis speak out over closure of only local supermarket
John McGrath and Shawn Nealis speak out over closure of only local supermarket
Photo by NY Daily News

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The only supermarket in the Woodlawn section of the Bronx, known affectionately as ‘Little Ireland,’ is set to close its doors shortly after St. Patrick’s Day. High rent and taxes are forcing its owners to shut up shop at the end of March.

The New York Daily News
reports that the closing of Woodlawn Heights Grocery Store will come as a huge disappointment to community members, especially the elderly Irish, in the relatively isolated neighborhood.

John McGrath, who serves as a  Woodlawn Taxpayers Association board member, said  the closing  would be "a disaster for the elderly in our neighborhood." The next closest grocery stores in the area are more than mile away in Yonkers or across the parkway in Wakefield.

"We cannot do without a grocery store," said McGrath, 61.

Further, the bus route that connects the areas no longer operates on the weekends. Many citizens have voiced their distaste for having to travel by bus or public transit to do their food shopping anyway.

The landlord of Woodlawn Height Grocery Store, Tony Monaco, says he is attempting to negotiate with a replacement tenant, though citizens are worries that the new facility will only be a large deli, instead of a full-size supermarket.

Joan Coogan (71), a native of Cork, said "I hope we get another supermarket. We were all crazy when we heard. We have nothing else up here and we elderly people, we don't drive."

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The grocery store’s operator Dominick DeCicco, whose family has operated the C-Town Supermarkets franchise for more than thirty years, says he feels “terrible” about having to close its doors to the people of Woodlawn, but has to face reality.

"Woodlawn is a beautiful neighborhood," said DeCicco (59). "I know everybody here. We love the community. But we need to make a profit."

Currently, DeCicco pays more than $20,000 a month on rent, real estate taxes and insurance. That, coupled with shoppers tending to spend less, have forced him into the tough situation.

When landlord Tony Monaco received a letter from DeCicco requesting a 50 percent rent reduction, he was surprised.

"I was left speechless when I got the letter," he said. "Sure, the economy is bad. But what am I supposed to do?"


Nster.com


8 Comments

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Thats not good for the Neigborhood..that store has been their 4ever ..way b/4 i've lived and terrorized the neihgborhood..what r the people left to do?
Don't forget the 5 year Gosplan!
CitizenWhy - Sounds like a great idea. Worked great in USSR, Cuba, and is currently turning out perfectly in Venezuela! We should have come to you first.
Shop local.
This is why every neighborhood needs to have an "essential shops" street run by a non-profit, governed by a neighborhood board, and paying reduced tax rates. Not running any businesses. Just renting to them at affordable rents.
It's time for Woodlawn neighbors to figure out a way to help the elderly shop or to shop for them. This has been done in almost every neighborhood I have lived - except where I live now, and I am elderly, lol. But shopping by bus is easy for me, and I go out for dinner often with a friend who drives me back and forth to the supermarket. ... Ms. Gail: I too remember the "to your door" food system in the Bronx. But the vendors were truck farmers from farms in the Bronx and Yonkers. Those farms are gone. The term truck farmer meant a farmer who trucked his/her own goods to customers.
I lived in the Bronx with my Irish grandmother in the early 50s. The meat man and the vegatable man still came door to door. The vegatable man with a horse drawn cart. Maybe some savy young business person needs to convert a small bus or truck to a traveling grocery store and travel around these neighborhoods.
Taxes,taxes taxes!!!!
 




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