After 10 years of service, the Price Rite Marketplace in Mt. Clare Junction Shopping Center will permanently close its doors by the end of December. (Photo by Alexis Taylor)

By Nicole D. Batey,
Special to the AFRO

The Price Rite Marketplace of West Pratt Street has served West Baltimore for 10 years. Now, just days before families are set to gather around the dinner table, Price Rite has announced that it is closing the sliding doors permanently at the end of December. 

Price Rite originally opened in 2013 and was rebranded as Price Rite Marketplace in 2019.

The supermarket is located in Southwest Baltimoreโ€™s Mount Clare Junction shopping center and is the only full service grocery store in the immediate area. Hollins Market and stores like Family Dollar will be left to fill in the gap.

A food desert is defined by the Baltimore City Health Department as an area in which:

  • The distance to a supermarket or supermarket alternative is more than 1/4 mile
  • The median household income is at or below 185 percent of the federal poverty level
  • Over 30 percent of households have no vehicle available
  • The average Healthy Food Availability Index (HFAI) score for all food stores is low

When a district meets all four criteria, it is designated a โ€œhealthy food priority area.โ€ The City Council District 10, where the store is located, has the second highest proportion of residents living in a priority area. Roughly 44 percent of the population in this area meet all four criteria for living in a food desert that is a high priority area, compared to 23.5 percent citywide. Nearly 12,000 โ€“52 percentโ€“of the cityโ€™s Black residents live in priority areas, compared to only 7,000 (38 percent) of its White residents. Also, seniors are the most likely of any age group to live in priority areas. 

There are only four, now soon to be three, supermarkets in the entire district.

โ€œThe parents and the older folks are the ones that need this store. If you take it out of the Black community, where are they supposed to go?โ€ asked Angela Baker, who spoke with the AFRO as she exited the store. โ€œIโ€™ve lived in the city all my life and it just seems like itโ€™s getting worse.โ€

Baker pointed out how access to fresh fruits and vegetables in America is directly linked to other issues like income and transportation. 

โ€œAre people supposed to take an Uber? A lot of these folks are on a fixed incomeโ€”they donโ€™t have money to keep getting Ubers to go to the market,โ€ said Baker. โ€œThey should be able to come around the corner and go grocery shopping in their own neighborhood.โ€

In a written statement, Karen Oโ€™Shea, of Wakefern Food Corporation, a retailer-owned cooperative comprised of nearly 50 member companies that includes Price Rite Marketplace and ShopRite, said:

โ€œAfter 10 years,  Price Rite Marketplace of West Pratt Street has made the very difficult decision to close the store next month,โ€  Oโ€™Shea stated. โ€œPrice Rite appreciates the loyalty of customers who have supported the store through the years and the dedicated team members who have worked hard to serve the community. We are sharing information with our team members regarding potential job opportunities and available positions at other Price Rite Marketplace stores in the region.โ€

That may be of little consolation to laid off workers and neighborhood shoppers who now have to figure out where theyโ€™ll buy fresh fruits and vegetables, as well as other nutritional foods.ย 

Help us Continue to tell OUR Story and join the AFRO family as a member โ€“subscribers are now members!ย  Joinย here!ย