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Ohio AG: Dollar General temporarily closes stores to fix pricing issues

The discounter briefly shuttered some of its stores in the state early Friday, a move the attorney general said was in response to his ongoing legal battles with the retailer. Dollar General, however, said computer issues were to blame.

Heather Lalley, Managing editor

January 27, 2023

3 Min Read
Dollar General
Dollar General temporarily closed some of its stores in Ohio Friday. / Photo: Shutterstock

Dollar General stores across Ohio temporarily shut down early Friday, an action the state’s attorney general said was taken to re-tag product prices amid ongoing issues with the retailer’s pricing.

The discounter began being investigated by the state last year, after Ohio Department of Agriculture auditors found that, in some stores, nearly 88% of items were more expensive at checkout than the prices listed on the shelf.

Earlier this month, Ohio AG Dave Yost filed a temporary restraining order against Dollar General, seeking to compel the retailer to charge the same prices at the register as are advertised on its shelves. That followed a November lawsuit filed by Yost against the chain over alleged deceptive pricing practices.

“Ohio’s Dollar General stores are shutting down to re-tag all their shelf prices—exactly the reason we sued them,” Yost said on Twitter Friday. “Glad to see this first step—but we are going to insist on the court order to enforce continued compliance with Ohio’s market fairness laws.”

Yost Twitter

A tweet from Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost early Friday. / Photo: Twitter

Goodlettsville, Tennessee-based Dollar General did not immediately respond to a WGB request for comment on the store closures. It’s unclear how many Dollar General locations in Ohio were impacted by the shutdowns.

The retailer, however, told local media in Ohio that it had closed some stores because of a computer issue.

“Dollar General closed select stores this morning to address an overnight systems error,” the chain told an NBC affiliate in Columbus. “This issue has been resolved and all impacted stores are now open to continue serving our customers. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused.”

A hand-written sign on one Dollar General store said the location was temporarily closed “for inventory,” NBC4 reported.

Employees at several other stores told the network that the stores were, in fact, closed to change shelf prices.

Dollar General has also faced mounting penalties from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), with fines totaling more than $15 million since 2017.

On Thursday, OSHA said it found stores in Middleburg and Green Cove Springs, Florida, as well as a store in Double Springs, Alabama, in which boxes and merchandise blocked exits, potentially preventing workers from leaving in an emergency. Dollar General was fined an additional $387,000 in those cases, OSHA said.

“Dollar General’s growing record of disregard for safety measures makes it abundantly clear that the company puts profit before people,” OSHA Regional Administrator Kurt Petermeyer in Atlanta said in a statement. “These violations are preventable, and failing to prevent them shows a blatant disregard for the workers on whom they depend to keep their stores operating. OSHA continues to make every effort to hold Dollar General accountable for its failures.”

Late last year, Dollar General revealed ambitious growth plans, saying it intends to open more than 1,000 new stores in 2023. The discounter reported a 12% increase in its food-and-beverage sales during the third quarter, nearly double its overall same-store sales growth for the period.

Dollar General, which operates nearly 19,000 stores in 47 states, sells fresh produce in more than 3,000 stores and plans to add fruit and vegetables to at least 2,000 locations this year.

 

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About the Author

Heather Lalley

Managing editor

Heather Lalley is the managing editor of Restaurant Business, Foodservice Director and CSP Daily news. She previously served as editor in chief of Winsight Grocery Business.

Before joining Winsight and Informa, Heather spent nearly a decade as a reporter for the daily newspaper in Spokane, Washington. She is the author of "The Chicago Homegrown Cookbook." She holds a journalism degree from Northwestern University and is a graduate of the two-year baking and pastry program at Washburne Culinary Institute in Chicago.

She is the mother of two and rarely passes up a chance to eat tater tots.

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