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Old 05-27-2013, 04:54 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Schaumburger View Post
When I have rented in TV, the Sweet Bay at LSL has been my "go to" place for groceries after 9:00 p.m., although the Winn Dixie on 441/27 is open until 10:00 p.m which has been helpful during my current rental in Del Mar.

Ditto here. We really liked TV's Sweetbay......

However, what confuses me is that we were told by the people at the Lake Sumter Landing "Sweetbay" that it was owned by HANNAFORD SUPERMARKETS out of Maine. We have Hannaford in Vermont and Maine.

Is it possible that the Sweetbay mentioned in the newspaper article is simply another store with the same name?

Nope, it's all connected...........as per Wikipedia article....






Sweetbay Supermarket

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Sweetbay SupermarketThe Villages FloridaTypeSubsidiary of Delhaize GroupIndustryRetailFounded1947 (as Big Barn)HeadquartersTampa, Florida, U.S.Number of locations72 (2013)[1]Key peopleBrad Wise, PresidentProductsGroceryEmployees9,000Websitesweetbaysupermarket.com
Sweetbay Supermarket is a chain of American supermarkets located entirely in Florida. The first Sweetbay Supermarket to open was in Seminole, Florida, in November 2004. The company is headquartered near Tampa, in unincorporated Hillsborough County, Florida,[2] in the Tampa Bay Area, and is a part of the Belgian Delhaize Group.
Contents


[hide] Kash n' Karry history [edit]

Not to be confused with Cash & Carry.
The Villages FloridaThe Villages Florida
Kash n' Karry store 1881 in Bradenton, FL (closed).


Salvatore Greco, an Italian immigrant, sold fruits and vegetables in the streets of Tampa beginning in 1914. In 1922, he and his wife Giuseppina opened a storefront at their home. The Greco family built a proper store in 1947 under the name Big Barn in Plant City, Florida. The business expanded and they had opened nine stores by 1960 with the name of Tampa Wholesale. In 1962, the name changed again to Kash n' Karry, based on the cash and carry program of World War II. People would bring in their "cash" and "carry" out their own groceries. They left out nonessential parts of supermarkets like contests, customer service representatives, and samples.[3]
Kash n' Karry was acquired by Lucky Stores of California in 1979.[4] After American Stores acquired Lucky in 1988, it sold Kash n' Karry to leveraged buyout firm Gibbons, Green, and van Amerongen.[5] As the buyout was being completed, Kash n' Karry bought 24 Florida Choice supermarkets from Kroger, who was closing the chain.[6] On the dissolution of Gibbons, Green, Leonard Green & Partners became the controlling stockholder.[4] Kash n' Karry filed for bankruptcy in 1994.[7]
Kash n' Karry held an IPO in 1995. In December 1996, Kash n' Karry became a wholly owned subsidiary of Food Lion.[4] In July 2000, after Food Lion's acquisition of Hannaford, the holding company Delhaize America, Inc., was created. As a result, Kash n' Karry became a wholly owned subsidiary of Delhaize America.
In 2002, Kash n' Karry pulled out of the competitive Orlando market with only one store remaining in Clermont, Florida, which as of 2013, has since closed . Two of three stores were closed in Gainesville, Florida.
On Wednesday, August 29, 2007, news reports said that the last Kash n' Karry store in Crystal River, Florida, closed, marking the end of the Kash n' Karry brand and the full conversion to Sweetbay Supermarket.[8]
Sweetbay history [edit]

In January 2004, after years of slumping sales growth, Kash n' Karry announced the creation and roll out of a new supermarket concept called Sweetbay Supermarket in its core markets on the West Coast of Florida. By September 2007, all Kash n' Karry stores were redesigned as Sweetbay Supermarkets. The first of the new Sweetbay Supermarkets opened in Seminole, Florida, on November 6, 2004, and in Fort Myers in December 2004.
In 2008, Sweetbay became the official supermarket of the Tampa Bay Rays baseball club.[9]
In January 2013, Sweetbay announced that 33 stores would close, leaving the chain with 72 stores. The closings were attributed to competition from regional grocery chain Publix and national chain Walmart.[10]
In May 2013, Reuters reported that Delhaize had engaged Lazard to explore the possible sale of Sweetbay and sister supermarket chain Harveys.[11]
Relationship to Hannaford [edit]

In 2002, management and supply chain at Kash n' Karry was transferred to sister chain Hannaford in hopes of repairing Kash n' Karry's performance, which ultimately led to the creation of Sweetbay.[12] When Sweetbay was created, it was modeled after Hannaford, incorporating store design, logo/branding elements, and pricing strategy from its northeastern sister company.[13] Additionally, Sweetbay stocked Hannaford-branded products as its generic store brand until 2011, when all Delhaize America stores began offering the Healthy Accents brand (for health & beauty items), the Home 360 brand (for home products) and the My Essentials brand (for food products).[14]
On March 17, 2008, Hannaford Supermarkets announced a data intrusion that resulted in the theft of customer credit and debit card numbers. No personal information, such as names or addresses, was accessed. The intrusion affected Hannaford stores, Sweetbay stores in Florida and certain independently owned retail locations in the Northeast that carry Hannaford products.