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Labor & Employment

  • Virtual Piggy beefs up executive team

    LOS ANGELES — Virtual Piggy, an online service that allows parents to monitor their children's online shopping behavior, has appointed Laura Janke Jaeger as general counsel. 

    Jaeger has more than 20 years of experience advising boards and management teams on strategic and financing activities, as well as transactional and other corporate and regulatory issues. 

  • Changes in leadership at Rite Aid

    CAMP HILL, Pa. — Rite Aid has appointed Ken Martindale as president and COO. Martindale is currently SVP and COO, as well as president of the Rite Aid Foundation. John Standley will continue as chairman and CEO.

  • Rosenfeld Realty Advisors to handle office and retail

    Boca Raton, Fla. -- Orin Rosenfeld has founded Rosenfeld Realty Advisors.

    As president of the new firm, Rosenfeld will draw on 18 years of commercial real estate experience with CBRE and NAI Merin Hunter Codman. The company will specialize in office and retail real estate and will represent both landlords and tenants across South Florida.

     

  • Los Angeles City Council bans plastic bags; rule to take effect in 2014

    New York  -- Los Angeles is on the fast track to becoming the largest city in the nation to move toward a ban on “single-use” plastic bags after the City Council passed a resolution barring their use in supermarkets, convenience stores and any big retailer, which would include Target and Walmart, that sells groceries.

  • Dollar General strikes gold at annual Stevie awards

    GOODLETTSVILLE, Tenn. — Dollar General received a Gold Stevie award for Company of the Year in Retail at the 11th annual American Business Awards in recognition of the company’s position as an industry leader in the retail sector.

  • Kroger creates two new divisions; makes exec appointments

    CINCINNATI -- The Kroger Co. announced the establishment of two new supermarket divisions, a Nashville division and a Louisville division.

    "Opportunities for growth in Tennessee, northern Alabama, Kentucky, and Southern Illinois and Indiana inspired us to take this path," said Rodney McMullen, Kroger's president and chief operating officer. "We believe this move will enable our associates to do what they do best – meet the needs of our local customers and neighbors, our communities, and each other."
       

  • New division heads to drive more growth at Kroger

    Growth opportunities in new geographies prompted Kroger to realign its organizational structure and place four executive in new roles.

    Just two days after reporting strong first quarter results, the nation’s second largest food retailer established two new supermarket divisions in Nashville and Louisville.

  • Ross Stores pays $3.9 million fine for defective kids’ clothing

    Pleasanton, Calif. -- Ross Stores has agreed to pay a $3.9 million fine to the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) for neglecting to inform the commission within a mandated 24-hour period that it sold or stocked in stores roughly 23,000 pieces of children’s apparel with drawstrings located at the neck or waist between January 2009 and February 2012. Sales of children’s clothing with these types of drawstrings has been officially banned in the U.S. since 2011 and subject to voluntary restrictions since 1996.

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