Save-A-Lot 881

Save-A-Lot #881 is a Save-A-Lot grocery store located in the State Street Center shopping center, at 1500 State Street in Racine, Wisconsin.

History
Supervalu proposed building a Save-a-Lot grocery store at the corner of State Street and North Memorial Drive in December 2000, to replace a commercial city block that was considered blighted. It would be the first grocery store in the inner city of Racine after Marquette Food & Liquor a few blocks away was destroyed by fire in July 1999.

Local union leaders protested Supervalu's decision to open a non-unionized store in Racine after closing a unionized Randall's County Market location at Westgate Mall Shopping Center, and asked the company to agree that it would not interfere with any future effort to organize a union at the new store. When Supervalu refused to sign the agreement, the Racine City Council stated that it would consider proposals from other companies.

By October 2001, no other proposals had been made for a grocery store at the site, and the city agreed to begin negotiating a development contract with Big Bend Development. Labor organizers continued to criticize the proposal, especially the city of Racine's plan to finance the demolition and redevelopment at a cost of $1.34 million, arguing that public funding should not be used to establish a business opposed to union organization. Despite the controversy, the city council agreed to the plan on December 4, 2001, with the goal of razing the buildings and transferring the property by the following October and allowing the store to open in spring 2003.

After some delays, all residents and businesses in the 1500 block of State Street were evicted by the end of November 2002, including Rondone's Liquor and Nu Vu Trendsetters. The city council gave its final approval for the demolition plan on November 27. The last building remaining on the block, 1522 State Street, was torn down on February 6, 2003.

A groundbreaking ceremony for State Street Center was held on June 4, 2003. The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers picketed at the construction site in October after the developers hired non-union electricians from Milwaukee, arguing that the decision deprived their members of work at a time when one-fourth of Racine's union electricians were unemployed. Save-A-Lot, the 12000 sqft primary anchor of the shopping center, opened at 7 a.m. on December 11, 2003.