Food Basics
Company type | Supermarket |
---|---|
Industry | Retail |
Founded | 1995 |
Headquarters | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Number of locations | 142[1] |
Key people | Liam Bryant (president) |
Products | Food, general merchandise (non-food) |
Parent | A&P Canada (1995–2005) Metro Inc. (2005–present) |
Website | www |
Food Basics Ltd. is a Canadian supermarket chain owned by Metro Inc. The company operates 142 stores throughout Ontario.[1]
History
Food Basics was created by A&P Canada to compete with the successful No Frills warehouse-style supermarket operated by Loblaw Companies. It became part of the Metro group[2] when A&P Canada was sold to Metro for $1.7 billion in 2005.[3]
Food Basics lowers its prices in a number of ways: low maintenance (no free plastic bags, just free cardboard boxes), store decor is kept to a minimum, and fewer staff are employed, mostly in part-time positions. The chain operates by pushing higher volumes on a limited selection of products than Metro stores, allowing it to compete price-wise with other grocery stores. There were 117 locations in Ontario. 36 were franchise stores until Metro Inc. purchased all stores back by the end of 2008.
Some Food Basics feature a pharmacy known as Food Basics Pharmacy.
Some locations are former Super Fresh or A&P supermarkets, dating from when both chains were operated by A&P,[4] or other former banners such as A&P-owned Dominion or Metro-owned Super C.
In the past, the owners' names appeared on the banner (e.g., 'John/Jane's Food Basics'); however, all stores are now simply called 'Food Basics'. Concurrent with this change is a different slogan, which was changed from "Best Prices Everyday!!!" to "Always more for less!"
In Fall 2006, Metro Inc. began to renovate Food Basics stores. The design and format of these new stores closely resemble Metro's Super C banner in Quebec. New store signs feature broken lettering and a larger emphasis on yellow, green, and beige colours. In Spring 2007, Metro Inc. initiated their new inventory system into all of its warehouses.
Labour relations
Food Basics is represented by the United Food and Commercial Workers union. Food Basics mostly offers part-time positions, and each store has few full-time positions. In 2015, overnight positions were discontinued by most stores because of budget reasons.
Locations
143 locations in Ontario:[5]
- Ajax (2)
- Ancaster
- Barrie
- Belleville
- Blenheim
- Bolton
- Bracebridge
- Bradford
- Brampton (4)
- Brantford (2)
- Brockville
- Burlington (3)
- Caledonia
- Cambridge (2)
- Chatham
- Chelmsford
- Cornwall (2)
- Courtice
- Dunnville
- Elmira
- Fonthill
- Georgetown
- Goderich
- Grimsby
- Guelph (3)
- Hamilton (7)
- Hanmer
- Hanover
- Kemptville
- Keswick
- Kingston (4)
- Kitchener (4)
- Leamington
- Lindsay
- Listowel
- London (5)
- Markham
- Midland
- Milton
- Mississauga (6)
- New Liskeard
- Newmarket
- Niagara Falls (2)
- North Bay
- Oakville (3)
- Orillia
- Oshawa
- Ottawa (8)
- Owen Sound
- Pembroke
- Pickering
- Port Colborne
- Port Elgin (coming soon)
- Port Hope
- Port Perry
- Richmond Hill (2)
- Rockland
- Sarnia
- Sault Ste. Marie (2)
- Simcoe
- Smiths Falls
- St. Catharines (2)
- St. Thomas
- Stratford
- Strathroy
- Sudbury (3)
- Tecumseh
- Timmins
- Thornhill (3)
- Toronto (16)
- Waterloo
- Welland
- Windsor (3)
- Woodbridge
- Woodstock
Private label brands
Food Basics carries many products from Metro's private label brands:
- "Irresistibles": premium quality products[6]
- "Selection": regular store-brand products[6]
- "Personnelle": pharmacy, health, and personal care products[7]
Previous private label brands
- "Master Choice": premium quality products.
- "Equality": regular store-brand products.
- "Basics for Less": large economy-sized products.
- "The Baker's Oven": bakery products
- "Great Basics Finds": ready-to-assemble furniture, clothing, housewares and other seasonal items that are specially priced, available in limited quantities, for a limited time[8]
- "Simply 1-2-3": low-price health and beauty products[citation needed]
- "Simply Kids": baby products including diapers, baby food and other baby products[citation needed]
See also
- List of supermarket chains in Canada
- Food Basics (USA) - The now-unrelated U.S.-based no-frills supermarket chain currently controlled by A&P
References
- ^ a b "More about us". Food Basics. Retrieved 2016-07-21.
- ^ "Upper James Metro to become Food Basics". The Hamilton Spectator. 2019-05-17. ISSN 1189-9417. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- ^ "Metro Inc. in deal to buy A&P Canada for $1.7B". CBC. July 20, 2005. Retrieved July 29, 2020.
- ^ HighBeam A&P Canada begins store conversions. (Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company Inc.)
- ^ "Food | Metro". corpo.metro.ca. Retrieved 2021-02-22.
- ^ a b "Our Brands for Less | Food Basics". www.foodbasics.ca. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
- ^ "Jean Coutu deal starts paying off for Metro | Canadian Grocer". Retrieved 2021-04-04.
- ^ "Metro Begins Store Conversions". Supermarket News. 2008-09-22. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
Sources
- Zwiebach, Elliot. "A&P Canada is forming franchise unit." Supermarket News. November 27, 1995[dead link ]
External links
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