© 2024 Boise State Public Radio
NPR in Idaho
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Chad Daybell's murder trial has begun. Follow along here.
In 2013, the Albertsons brand was reunited under one company umbrella. Supervalu sold all Albertsons, Acme, Jewel-Osco, Shaw’s and Star Market stores in a $3.3 billion deal to Cerberus Capital Management, the investment firm that purchased some of the Albertsons stores in 2006.Albertsons Inc. was split into pieces in 2006, and the majority of it was acquired by grocery store giant Supervalu. Minneapolis-based Supervalu purchased the company for $17.4 billion.According to the St. Louis Business Journal, the drug store chain CVS purchased 700 of Albertsons' Sav-on and Osco Drug stores "and Albertson's ownership interests in the drugstore real estate for about $2.9 billion."Albertsons Boise-based workforce, including its headquarters, shrank from between 5,000 and 6,000 employees to between 3,000 and 4,000, according to Idaho Department of Labor data.Albertsons, familiar to Idahoans as the store with the big blue A, was founded in Boise in 1939 by Joe Albertson. He's quoted as saying, "In good times or bad, people have to eat, so I figure it's a good business."According to material from Albertsons' old website, that first Boise store was revolutionary. Shoppers weren't used to grocery stores that included a bakery, automatic doughnut machines, magazine racks and ice cream cones.Here's a brief timeline provided by RedSky Public Relations:1939 Joe Albertson enters into partnership with L.S. Skaggs and Tom Cuthbert, Mr. Skaggs’ accountant, and opens his first Albertsons store in Boise, Idaho.1951 Albertsons opens first combination food and drug store, a 60,000-square-foot superstore.1957 Albertsons begins incorporating drug stores in the new Albertsons Food Centers with the purchase of Sugarhouse Drug in Salt Lake City.1959 Albertsons becomes a public entity and begins selling shares over the counter.1978 Albertsons builds Boise General Office.1999 Albertsons and American Stores Company merge.2001 Larry Johnston joins Albertsons as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer.2004 Albertsons acquires over 200 Shaw’s and Star Market stores in New England, and acquires the specialty chain of Bristol Farms, which consists of 11 stores in Southern California.2013 Supervalu sells all Albertsons, Acme, Jewel-Osco, Shaw’s and Star Market stores in a $3.3 billion deal to Cerberus Capital Managemet, reuniting the Albertsons and Albertsons Market stores under one umbrella.At it's peak, there were more than 2,500 Albertsons-brand stores across the country. Today, Supervalu owns 450 of those Albertsons stores in nine states, including all of its Idaho locations.At the time when Supervalu purchased Albertsons Inc., another piece of the Albertsons' empire split off and formed Albertsons LLC. According to it's website, the LLC, which is branded as Albertsons Market, acquired 200 stores in Northern California, Colorado, Utah, Nebraska, South Dakota, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Florida.

Former Albertson's CEO Raises Concerns Over New Boise Baseball Park

Idaho Statesman
/
Boise Hawks
Rendering of what Downtown Boise multi-use stadium might look like.

Last week, Former Albertson’s CEO Gary G. Michael sent a letter to the Greater Boise Auditorium District Board of Directors. The letter was sent on behalf of a group Michael called the Concerned Taxpayers of Boise.

 

 

His letter requested that, "more solid information be provided to the taxpaying citizens of Boise, before any money is paid for the acquisition of any land in a public/private partnership for a baseball multi-use field."

 

The letter asks the GBAD board to look into an analysis of traffic generated by the project, loss in property value, noise impact, lighting impact, environmental impact and impact on businesses in the surrounding areas. Michael also said these analyses should take no less than three to six months to conduct and results should be shared with Boise citizens.

 

The 11 acres of land planned to be used for this new stadium is currently owned by St. Lukes on the corner of Americana Boulevard and Shoreline Drive. According to the Idaho Statesman, development company Greenstone Properties plans to finalize a deal by the end of July to purchase the land.

 

The GBAD board plans to address the issues in Michael’s letter during Wednesday afternoon’s board meeting.

 
For more local news, follow the KBSX newsroom on Twitter @KBSX915

Copyright 2017 Boise State Public Radio

You make stories like this possible.

The biggest portion of Boise State Public Radio's funding comes from readers like you who value fact-based journalism and trustworthy information.

Your donation today helps make our local reporting free for our entire community.