That store on 89th and Penn is indeed a terrible store, but it was heavily used. There is one further south on 119th and Penn but it's always busy as well, I imagine now it's going to be even worse.
That store on 89th and Penn is indeed a terrible store, but it was heavily used. There is one further south on 119th and Penn but it's always busy as well, I imagine now it's going to be even worse.
****, we left the 50th/May store a long time ago because it was such a hellhole (insane lines at the pharmacy with all kinds of stupidity happening with every customer, took forever), and started using 23rd/May. Guess we're gonna go to delivery of our prescriptions now and just stop going to them at all, don't want to ever set foot in the 50th/May store ever again.
The pharmacies are in the back of the stores for a reason: to draw customers through the rest of the store.
Even moving more towards a drive-thru model has had to hurt foot traffic at Walgreens and CVS.
And of course, the pharmacy business model is being disrupted on various fronts, especially the deep discounters like Walmart and various online options.
What's bizarre to me is they closed the pharmacy at the SW 44th and S Shields store, but that store will be staying open?? And instead they're closing SW 89th and Penn, the one Walgreens on the south side that still had decent pharmacy hours??? I'm so confused right now.
It's all about if the overall store is performing well. Pharmacies can make money, but they also cost a lot of money too. If enough people are using the "market" side of the store to keep it going, well there you go. There are plenty of other local pharmacies near any of these, that you'll probably have a faster and better customer experience anyway.
I try to only use these places for covid booster/flu shots (only because my pharmacy doesn't carry the brand of covid shot that I prefer). They are good FedEx drop locations too, although i dont think they make much off of that....if any really. I treat the market side as an alternative when i dont want to go all the way to walmart to get something like gauze or certain shelf medications. It's convenience, but we also pay for that convenience. I'm honestly surprised that most of these places are not already closed. I just can't think of why people would buy most of the things that are in there, when the prices for the grocery store down the street are so much better. Then i remember how lazy people are and that sometimes just doing it all in one place is the winner. Or if you're less mobile, it really is a factor for you.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks