San Diego Approves Plastic Bag Ban

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Reprinted from the San Diego Union-Tribune (7/19/16)

City is 150th municipality in California to eliminate single-use plastic bags in certain stores, food retailers

The San Diego City Council on Tuesday voted 6-3 to ban single-use plastic bags at large grocery stores, pharmacies and corner markets — becoming one of the last major cities in California to limit the disposable products.

“Citizen across the state have demonstrated the ability to transition to more sustainable, reusable bags, and I’m confident that the citizens of San Diego will quickly adopt this beneficial practice,” City Council President Sherri Lightner said during the council’s afternoon meeting.

“I strongly believe that now is the time to demonstrate local leadership on this issue and make a clear statement that we value our environment,” she added.

Mayor Kevin Faulconer said he plans to sign the ordinance, which would make San Diego the 150th municipality in California with a ban on plastic checkout bags, which often end up in landfills or as litter in storm drains, rivers, canyons and beaches.

Councilmen Mark Kersey, Scott Sherman and Chris Cate voted in opposition, citing broad concerns about local government overreach.

“All this trash, all this litter was put there by somebody or carelessly left behind because they were too lazy to haul this stuff home,” Sherman said at the meeting. “We need to start dealing with those laws that are on the books, the littering, the dumping, and making those fines and those penalties so people think twice.”

A second reading of the ordinance is expected within a few weeks. Once finalized, the rules would give large food stores about six months to comply and approximately a year for smaller drug and convenience stores.

The proposed ban drew wide support from the audience in council chambers Tuesday, which included advocacy organizations such as the Surfrider Foundation’s San Diego County chapter and San Diego Coastkeeper to business-minded groups such as the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce and the Equinox Project.

“The vast majority of plastic bags we see are entangled in the brushes next to our rivers and streams,” said Kristin Kuhn, community engagement manager for Coastkeeper. “After every rain event, these bags clog and choke our city’s already damaged waterways.”

The stated goal of the new ordinance is to encourage shoppers to bring their own reusable sacks in order to decrease the roughly 700 million plastic checkout bags distributed locally every year. Only 3 percent of those bags are recycled, according to the city.

Like most plastic-bag bans in the state, San Diego’s policy requires grocery stores and other food retailers to charge at least 10 cents for each paper bag or for a sturdier reusable bag, which often costs considerably more.

“Stakeholders have worked tirelessly with local jurisdictions throughout the state to find a solution that makes sense for both the environment and businesses,” Sophie Barnhorst, policy coordinator for the chamber of commerce, said at the council meeting. “A ban on plastic and a charge for paper has the potential to achieve maximal environment gain with minimal business disruption.”

The city’s policy comes a few months ahead of a referendum vote in this fall’s general election on whether to uphold a statewide prohibition on single-use checkout bags.

After California in 2014 passed the nation’s only statewide ban on such products, the plastics industry launched a signature drive to overturn the law, criticizing it as a tax on shoppers and an ineffective way to fight pollution.

The American Progressive Bag Alliance has raised more than $6.4 million — funded largely by out-of-state bag manufacturers — to overturn the statewide ban in November. If that ban is voided, the municipal ones — including San Diego’s — would remain in place.

“Like other local bag ordinances in California, this law will do nothing to benefit the environment or residents while letting grocers make millions annually in new bag fees,” said Lee Califf, executive director of the bag alliance.

Bag manufacturers also have spearheaded another ballot measure this fall that would require stores to redirect money from bag sales to a fund administered by the Wildlife Conservation Board. The bag fees are estimated to bring in tens of millions of dollars annually, according to the Independent Legislative Analyst’s Office.

“While San Diego residents should have been given the opportunity to vote to repeal the bag ban, they will still be able to vote in November to allow their local government to redirect bag fees to the environment,” Califf said.

Supporters of eliminating single-use plastic bags see the San Diego council’s vote as a boon for the campaign to uphold the statewide ban.

“Polling has shown that people already living under a ban are more likely to support the statewide effort because they realize that it’s not that big of a deal,” said Genevieve Abedon, waste prevention campaign coordinator with Californians Against Waste, which is part of a coalition that has raised about $1.6 million to defeat the overturn referendum.

San Diego officials said based on statistics from the county of Los Angeles, which adopted its ban in 2010, customers will eventually bring their own reusable bags for about 65 percent of purchases at grocery stores and other retailers — eliminating about 95 percent of all single-use plastic bags distributed in the city.

San Diego stores subject to the new ordinance could be forced to pay up to $2,500 for each day they’re not in compliance. In addition, they would have to track for three years the number of paper bags they provide to customers each month and provide that data to the city upon request.

The city’s ban doesn’t extend to smaller disposable bags used for meat, produce and other loose perishable items. Restaurants and department stores also aren’t covered by the measure.

In anticipation of the ordinance, San Diego has distributed about 40,000 reusable shopping bags, focusing on low-income neighborhoods, food banks, schools and libraries, according to city officials.

San Diego’s ban requires that paper bags be provided for free to customers who are receiving government food assistance, including through the California Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants and Children.

In this region, Solana Beach, Encinitas and Del Mar had passed similar bans. Oceanside is poised to vote on such a measure as early as next month.

About 40 percent of Californians now live in areas with some type of restriction on plastic bags, including Long Beach, San Jose, Sacramento and Oakland, as well as San Francisco, the city that led the push against single-use bags in 2007.

Last year, Huntington Beach became the only city in the state so far to repeal a plastic-bag ban — after its elected leaders and many residents expressed concerns over government overreach.

Voters will consider a new use for bag fees on November ballot

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Reprinted from The Los Angeles Times

California voters in November will not only decide whether to uphold the state’s plastic bag ban, but will also whether to redirect fees on paper and reusable bags to environmental projects.

Secretary of State Alex Padilla on Wednesday announced that a bag fee initiative, backed by the plastic bag industry, has qualified for the Nov. 8 statewide ballot.

The American Progressive Bag Alliance submitted nearly 600,000 signatures in favor of the initiative after it gathered  more than 800,000 signatures on petitions for a referendum on the statewide bag ban.

The bag ban law “has never been about protecting the environment,” Lee Califf, executive director of the bag alliance, said in a prepared statement. “This measure gives voters the opportunity to make sure that any state-mandated fee will go to environmental causes, which is what voters thought they were getting in the first place.”

The ballot measure would require stores to deposit their bag sale proceeds into a special fund administered by the Wildlife Conservation Board. It would mandate the board develop regulations to implement the law.

An analysis by the independent Legislative Analyst’s Office has estimated that revenue redirected from retailers to environmental efforts could total tens of millions of dollars annually.

If the referendum is successful in stopping the statewide ban on single-use bags, then the initiative would only impact bag fees in communities with local bans in place.

Band-aid for closing recycling centers passes California Assembly

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Reprinted from the Sacramento Bee (6/27/2016)

Recyclers and grocery stores would get a reprieve from the causes and fallout of a wave of recycling center closures – and policymakers could get prodded toward a larger deal – under a budget bill that passed the Assembly on Monday.

Hundreds of facilities that pay cash for used bottles and cans have closed around the state this year, with recyclers placing much of the blame on lower subsidies from the state’s recycling fund. If recycling centers vanish, grocery stores become obligated to take back recyclables themselves or face fines, so the California Grocers Association has been lobbying for a grace period.

A short-term fix initially failed to make it into the budget. Gov. Jerry Brown’s administration favors a broader overhaul of California’s wobbly recycling system, which has faced annual deficits in the tens of millions of dollars.

But amid a late lobbying push by grocers, retailers, recyclers and organized labor, the Assembly crafted a stopgap measure that would freeze payments to recyclers at higher 2015 rates and give grocers a reprieve through April of 2017. The Senate and Brown still need to approve the measure.

There’s a catch: Payments to everyone involved in the teeming recycling ecosystem, from manufacturers to supermarkets, would halt altogether as of April 2017. Lawmakers said that impending loss of funds would give parties an incentive to produce a deal.

“We felt strongly there needed to be a temporary solution,” said Assemblyman Rich Gordon, D-Menlo Park, but with the 2017 deadline, “it sets a cliff, essentially,” that all parties will want to avoid tumbling off of.
Read more here.

: http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article86294562.html#storylink=cpy

Hundreds of California recycling centers close – what now?

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Reprinted from The Sacramento Bee

Blue bins piled high with gleaming cans and pink plastic bags bulging with plastic jugs snaked up to the recycling center outside a Foods Co. on a recent Wednesday morning, with customers lined up to cash in their containers.

A homeless man named Aaron Viramontes said he stops by two to three times a week in search of cash. Another customer who arrived in a minivan loaded with boxes full of bottles said he always brings his empties to the center – “I paid for it in the store,” he noted, “so I should get my money back.”

But completing that transaction could get tougher. The company that runs the facility, RePlanet, has already closed scores of California locations amid a financial crunch that has gotten the attention of policymakers in Sacramento. Nearby centers had already stopped accepting items, and some customers had noticed.

“The question is, where would we recycle” if the closures continue? said John Viernes, a 29-year-old physical therapist who said he got into the habit of bringing his cans and bottles to recycling centers in Hawaii, where “the soil is sacred.” “It would be tough.”

The shuttering of hundreds of recycling centers around California has reduced opportunities to cash in bottles and cans while stirring anxiety for grocery store owners who may be forced to start accepting reusable materials themselves. As interest groups press policymakers for a solution, the situation has again illuminated the ongoing challenges facing California’s labyrinthine recycling system.

“This is a crisis for consumers who aren’t going to be able to get their money back on the containers they’ve purchased,” said Californians Against Waste executive director Mark Murray, “it’s a crisis of the stores who aren’t fond of taking containers back inside the store, and it’s a crisis for recycling centers who want to be in the business of taking back containers but can’t make it work in this financial market.”

Recycling facilities like those you see in grocery store parking lots receive subsidies from the state. Those payouts – determined either by subtracting the average value of scrap materials from the average cost of recycling or by using a survey to determine the average per-container cost of recycling, depending on the type of facility – help recycling centers stay financially viable.

Grocery stores and other places that sell recyclable materials like beverage containers, meanwhile, rely on those recycling centers. State law mandates that sellers either have on-site recycling facilities or sit within a half mile of one. If not, they are on the hook to either accept reusable items themselves or pay a $100-a-day fine.

Citing lower payments from the state and increased labor costs, the recycling giant RePlanet announced in January it had shut down 191 centers (a representative did not respond to requests for comment). According to CalRecycle, 298 went offline in the first quarter of this year. The per-container cost survey compels the state to slash payments to supermarket-based centers another 11 percent on July 1.

Legislators pressing for a response say constituents are already feeling the strain.

“Rural communities, in many cases in Northern California, have few if any locations to be able to recycle their cans and bottles,” said Sen. Mike McGuire, D-Healdsburg, and in more urban areas, “the public is having to wait sometimes upwards of two hours to be able to have their recyclables processed.”

A complex system of interlocking fees and payments, California’s recycling system has been undermined by its own popularity.

It’s funded largely by upfront fees on each container sold in California. But as more people recycle, more money leaves the system – both from people cashing in bottles and cans and from curbside collectors gleaning payments, among other transactions. As a result, in recent years the system has allocated more than it takes in by the tens of millions.

Global commodity prices largely explain the current woes of recycling centers. The plummeting scrap value of recyclable materials like aluminum and glass has hurt their bottom line, and the number of centers statewide has dipped from around 2,100 to under 1,800 in recent years.

“Falling commodities prices” have “really had an impact on the health of our industry,” said Joe Pickard. chief economist for the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries. “2015 was the worst year we’ve seen, probably, in not just a decade but in a generation.”

To a large extent, Pickard said, tempering that volatility is “really beyond or government or our industry’s control” given the system’s reliance on global economic forces. But some California policymakers want to give CalRecycle the flexibility to respond more rapidly to how shifting prices determine what recyclers get paid.

“The program … is not nimble enough to deal with changes in the commodity market,” said Assemblyman Rich Gordon, D-Menlo Park.

An alarmed grocery industry has pleaded with Sacramento for assistance as the wave of closures has unfolded.

“The choice is to either take that garbage at a checkout line, which we would fear health inspectors coming in and saying no to that (or) the alternative is paying $36,500” each year, said Aaron Moreno, a lobbyist for the California Grocers Association. “Grocery stores should get some kind of relief, because this is a situation where we literally did nothing wrong.”

Gov. Jerry Brown’s administration has pushed back on calls for a short-term fix, declining to get behind a stopgap budget proposal – backed by the grocers and by Murray’s organization – that would have frozen the processing payment and handling fee rates and given grocery stores an 18-month reprieve from the proximity-to-recyclers mandate.

Better than a short-term fix that would have cost the state recycling fund around $22 million a year, said a spokesman for the state Department of Finance, would be an overarching deal that looks broadly at how to reshape California’s recycling program.

“We’ve been pushing for a comprehensive solution, going back a couple years, to get the (recycling) fund on an even keel,” said spokesman H.D. Palmer.

A working group headed by McGuire has been negotiating a larger deal. Ideas kicked around so far have included increasing the processing fee levied on beverage manufacturers or limiting how much the program offsets what they pay; reducing the amount consumers can claim; letting CalRecycle more easily adjust what it pays recycling centers to reflect the shifting global commodities market; and expanding the universe of containers the program accepts.

But forging a deal could take time, and meanwhile, McGuire and others are pushing for a temporary fix.

“It is going to be a long, challenging summer if grocers are having to take in recyclables from residents within their communities,” McGuire said.
Read more here.

Senators Reach GMO Labeling Deal

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Occurs week before Vermont labeling law takes effect
(reprinted from Progressive Grocer – 6/24/2016)

Two U.S. senators have reached a bipartisan agreement on legislation requiring the first mandatory, nationwide label for food products containing genetically modified organisms (GMOs), one week before a GMO labeling law takes effect in Vermont.

Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), ranking member of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, and Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), the committee chairman, reached the agreement, which would be more lenient than Vermont’s law requiring on-pack labeling of GMO ingredients, and allow food companies to communicate via a text label, symbol or electronic label accessible via smartphone. Vermont’s law, on the other hand, would require items to be labeled “produced with genetic engineering.”

The two senators believe their agreement would close “glaring loopholes” in the Vermont law; for instance, a cheese pizza could be labeled, but a pepperoni pizza could not, even if it contained a GMO ingredient.

“This bipartisan bill is a win for consumers and families,” Stabenow said. “For the first time ever, consumers will have a national, mandatory label for food products that contain genetically modified ingredients.

“This proposal is also a win for our nation’s farmers and food producers,” she continued. “Throughout this process I worked to ensure that any agreement would recognize the scientific consensus that biotechnology is safe, while also making sure consumers have the right to know what is in their food. I also wanted a bill that prevents a confusing patchwork of 50 different rules in each state. This bill achieved all of those goals, and most importantly recognizes that consumers want more information about the foods they buy.”

Additionally, Stabenow fought for important provisions to maintain the integrity of the nation’s organic program. Although organics have always been non-GMO, this agreement ensures organic producers can clearly display a “non-GMO” label in addition to the organic seal, providing additional information to consumers about the food they eat.

Finally, the agreement contains important provisions that uphold consumer protection laws at both the state and federal levels. Stabenow worked to secure these provisions to ensure that the bill would not impede on states’ rights.

The agreement received support from several industry associations. Leslie Sarasin, president and CEO of the Food Marketing Institute, commended Stabenow and Roberts, urging other senators to promptly vote in favor of the compromise.

“A national standard for GMO labeling is essential if we are to avoid the economic costs incurred by a patchwork of differing state laws,” she said. “By preventing this patchwork, the Roberts-Stabenow agreement will avoid greater consumer confusion, allow efficiency and enable the industry to proceed in a more orderly and reasonable fashion to provide consumers the information they want. We and the 800 other Coalition for Safe Affordable Food member organizations nationwide stand ready to do all we can to work for rapid passage of the agreement.”

Meanwhile, Pamela G. Bailey, president and CEO of the Grocery Manufacturers Association, hailed the compromise as a “common-sense solution” for consumers, businesses and farmers.

“The Senate needs to pass this bill quickly,” she stated. “This bipartisan agreement ensures consumers across the nation can get clear, consistent information about their food and beverage ingredients and prevents a patchwork of confusing and costly state labeling laws.

“We thank Senators Roberts and Stabenow for their hard work and leadership to find the solution that can give consumers more information about genetically engineered ingredients and prevent different state labeling laws,” she continued. “It is critically important that Congress approve this legislation as soon as possible because Vermont’s mandatory labeling law is already having negative impacts.”

However, organizations such as the Organic Consumers Association (OCA) criticized the bill, saying it “tramples” on consumers’ rights.

“The anti-consumer bill unveiled by Stabenow and Roberts, bought and paid for by Big Food corporations, nullifies Vermont’s mandatory GMO-labeling law, and replaces it with a law that replaces the requirement for clear, on-package labels with a convoluted, inconvenient and discriminatory scheme involving barcodes and 1-800 numbers,” said Ronnie Cummins, international director, OCA. “The proposed bill also gives food corporations another two years before they are even required to pretend to provide consumers with any information at all about the GMO ingredients in their products. Stabenow and Roberts are determined to preempt Vermont’s law, even though major food corporations such as General Mills, Campbell’s, Pepsi, Frito-Lay, Mars, Kellogg’s, ConAgra are already labeling, to comply with Vermont’s July 1 deadline for labeling.”

Website Assists Retailers Comply With New Law

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On June 6, 2016, the California Department of Public Health posted significant information to its Tobacco21 website, linked HERE, designed to help tobacco retailers navigate significant new regulation of tobacco and related products.

On May 4, ending speculation and a minor political drama, California Governor Jerry Brown signed into law a package of measures that, among other things, raises the tobacco sales age from 18 to 21 and brings additional products under STAKE Act regulation. The measures take effect June 9, 2016.

The bills were passed in an Extraordinary Session called by the Governor to address health care financing. During debate on the measure, news broke in the media that lobbyists for the bill’s opponents had threatened to launch a referendum on the measure if it became law.

In response, the Legislature held the bill for approximately 43 days passage working to essentially run the clock out on any attempted referendum making the ballot in November. The Governor, in turn, waited his full 12-day allotment before signing the bill further complicating any attempt to overturn the new law in November.

CGA did not weigh in on the bills themselves, but tobacco retailers should be mindful of the short timeline for implementation. CGA has been working with the Department of Public Health to push for release of modifications to required signage and other compliance tools for tobacco retailers.

In addition, on June 6, in partnership with other associations representing tobacco retailers, CGA submitted a letter to the Department of Public Health requesting a delay in enforcement given the extremely short timeframe tobacco retailers have to retrain employees, reprogram POS systems, and produce and post new signage. A response to that request has not yet been received.

2016 Grocers Day at the Capitol Highlights

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grocersdaylogoGrocery retailers and their supplier partners from throughout California gathered in Sacramento on Tuesday, March 29, to share business concerns with their state representatives on key issues facing the grocery industry.

The face-to-face meetings with the majority of state legislators highlighted the 2016 CGA Grocers Day at the Capitol, the Association’s one-day member advocacy event in the State’s Capitol.

“This was a critical year for our members to participate in CGA’s premier member lobbying activity,” said CGA President Ron Fong. “Our members really stepped up and did a tremendous job of sharing our story and providing valuable insight into how our businesses operate.”

In addition to the face-to-face meetings, attendees heard from Gov. Jerry Brown who addressed a number of topics during his 30-minute presentation including the deal he closed with labor leaders over Easter weekend to introduce legislation that will raise the state’s minimum wage to $15.

The governor said the deal needed to be struck as an alternative to a minimum wage proposition that may appear on the November ballot that would be even more burdensome on California’s business community then his proposal.

The governor’s remarks were met with skepticism by the Association which later released a statement chiding the governor for not including the business community in its meeting with labor.

“While there may very well be a need to look at adjusting the minimum wage in California and working on the complex issues of income inequality and poverty, our members are disappointed in the way this measure was crafted in a backroom deal and passed by the Legislature, without their input, in less than a week,” Fong said in a statement on Thursday. “It seems irresponsible to mandate increases in wages without any consultation from the very businesses who will be forced to pay them.”

Attendees were also briefed by CGA staff on the key issues they would be discussing with legislators during their visits. These topics included employee scheduling, wine coupons, food bank donation tax credits and the state’s beleaguered beverage container recycling program.

Following an afternoon of legislative visits, CGA hosted its annual President’s Reception that allowed Grocers Day attendees to meet again with state legislators and staff but in a more relaxed environment.

CGA also hosted its popular Ice Cream Social, located this year inside the State Capitol and was sponsored by Clover Stornetta Farms which provided the ice cream and toppings.

The Association wishes to thank all sponsoring companies for their generous support of this year’s Grocers Day;

Gold Level
Albertsons, Safeway, Vons & Pavilions
Coca-Cola Refreshments
Unified Grocers, Inc.

Silver Level
C&S Wholesale Grocers
Costco Wholesale
Gelson’s Markets
Retail Marketing Services, Inc.

Bronze Level
Food 4 Less/Rancho San Miguel Markets
Grocery Outlet
North State Grocery, Inc.
Nutricion Fundamental
Ralphs Grocery Company/Food 4 Less
Smart & Final

Breakfast
Kellogg Company
Save Mart Supermarkets

Luncheon
Jelly Belly Candy Co.

Ice Cream Social
Clover Stornetta Farms, Inc.

President’s Reception
Command Packaging
MillerCoors

 

Grocers Day Highlights

[FAG id=3891]

Minimum wage initiative set for California’s fall ballot

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Reprinted from The Sacramento Bee (3/23/2016)

A ballot measure that would increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2021 is headed for the November ballot, elections officials said Tuesday.

The Secretary of State’s Office projected that sponsors of “The Fair Wage Act of 2016” had turned in 423,236 valid voter signatures, more than enough to qualify by random sampling and avoid a complete count.

The initiative’s sponsor, Service Employees International Union United Healthcare Workers West, could choose to abandon the measure as late as June 30, amid the possibility that lawmakers, Gov. Jerry Brown and others could agree on an alternative approach before then.

Tuesday’s proposal would raise the minimum wage, currently $10 an hour, to $11 an hour by 2017, and by $1 an hour each subsequent year until it reaches $15 per hour Jan. 1, 2021. After that, the wage would automatically rise with the cost of living.

Supporters have raised more than $4.7 million, almost all of that from SEIU, United Healthcare Workers West.

The Service Employees International Union’s state council, California’s largest labor union, is currently gathering increasingly expensive signatures for a competing minimum wage increase. Similar to the UHW proposal, it would hike the base wage to $15 an hour by 2020 as well as mandate six paid sick days a year.

The current $10-an-hour wage kicked in at the start of the year, but statewide polls have consistently shown strong support for further increasing the wage floor in California.

Yet advocates worry that dueling proposals by quarreling unions could lead to mutual destruction, with voters rejecting both measures.

Tuesday’s signature update brings to eight the number of ballot measures that have qualified for the fall ballot, including efforts to ban plastic bags and require condom use in pornography filming.

CGA Hosts ADA Compliance Seminars

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The challenges of complying with the American With Disabilities Act were addressed at two regional seminars hosted by the California Grocers Association.

The seminars were conducted byDowney Brand, a Sacramento-based law firm CGA contracted with to create a comprehensive, user-friendly tool for the Association’s Grocery Compliance Toolkit. The toolkit was created to house various compliance “tools” to help grocery retailers understand and manage risks associated with complying with state regulations.

The ADA material was the second “tool” in the compliance toolkit. Previously, CGA released the first “tool,” that addressed hazardous waste disposal.

The ADA material and accompanying seminar address numerous issues including:

  • Overview of public access law
  • Understanding obligations for landlords vs tenants
  • Parking and paths of travel
  • Signage
  • Merchandise access
  • Restrooms
  • Point of Sale Issues
  • Service Animals

Attendees received a copy of the ADA toolkit. The CGA Educational Foundation will host a webinar on the ADA compliance toolkit on April 6. Registration information will be available the week of March 21 on the CGA website. Website participants will be provided a link to download the ADA compliance toolkit.

Brad Askeland Elected New CGA Educational Foundation Chair

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Brad Askeland, Vice President, Holiday Markets, has been elected Chairman of the California Grocers Association Educational Foundation Board of Trustees. Askeland had previously served as Foundation Vice Chair.

AskelandAskeland succeeds former CGAEF Chair Jim Van Gorkom, NuCal Foods, who served in that position since 2011. Mark Johnson, Unified Grocers, Inc., was elected to replace Askeland as the Board’s Vice Chair. Jacquie Slobom, Gelson’s Markets and Jerry Landers, Raley’s will continue as the Foundation’s secretary and treasurer, respectively.

“We look forward to Brad building on the programs Jim was instrumental in fostering,” said CGAEF President Ron Fong. “Brad has tremendous passion for the Foundation and will serve well as chair.”

Askeland’s responsibilities will be to guide and direct the CGAEF Board of Trustees. The Foundation was created in 1992 to advance California’s grocery industry through employee education, industry research and recognition of excellence.

The Foundation will celebrate its 25th year in 2017. During the past quarter-century the Foundation has awarded more than 3,200 scholarships totaling more than $4 million to deserving grocery industry employees and their dependents. In addition, the Foundation has reimbursed more than 13,000 individual courses for more than $1.3 million.

Askeland, who has served as a Trustee since 2009, began his grocery career in 1988 as a courtesy clerk for a small independent market before joining North State Grocery, Inc. in 1995. He managed several stores before being named director of human resources in 2003. Most recently, Askeland was promoted to vice president of Holiday Markets, a division of North State Grocery.