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July 30, 2007

First Lucky Store Opens in San Francisco and Introduces Stiffer, Sturdier, Recyclable Plastic Grocery Bags

Lucky opened its first of 72 new stores in San Francisco this week and has chosen this occasion to introduce a new item that will be carried in its stores--reusable, recyclable plastic handle grocery bags, which are made from recycled plastic. The bags are the first reusable plastic grocery bags available in the city and they will soon be available in all Bay Area Lucky stores.

San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) July 27, 2007 -- Lucky opened its first of 72 new stores in San Francisco this week and has chosen this occasion to introduce a new item that will be carried in its stores--reusable, recyclable plastic handle grocery bags, which are made from recycled plastic. The bags are the first reusable plastic grocery bags available in the city and they will soon be available in all Bay Area Lucky stores.

Lucky will provide a limited number of the reusable bags free of charge to customers over the next few days. The bags will then retail for 25 cents each. Customers will receive 5 cents back each time they bring the reusable bag to a Lucky store. Since customers will be able to use a single bag at least 20 times, at 5 cents per reuse, they can actually earn money on these bags.

The new bags are in compliance with the San Francisco Plastic Bag Reduction Ordinance, which requires grocery stores to provide only reusable and/or compostable plastic bags to customers at checkout. With dimensions of 18 x 16 x 8 inches, the reusable bag is 15-20 percent larger than a paper handle bag. It can hold approximately 50 percent more volume and weight than a standard plastic bag, holding over 25 lbs. of groceries. The bags are recyclable alongside other plastic grocery bags in the recently mandated supermarket recycling bins.

The Lucky reusable bags are custom-designed and produced by Northern California plastic bag and film manufacturer Roplast Industries, Inc (http://www.roplast.com). Recyclable, and manufactured with 20 percent recycled material, the bags are from one of Roplast's environmental product lines called the Bring Back BagĀ®. The Lucky-branded bag is made from co-extruded film using special blends to improve the gloss, strength and stiffness, so that it stands up like paper bags for loading. The 6-color, magazine-like print and striking graphics reflect the quality of the store's new brand.

Robert Bateman, president of Roplast Industries notes, "This program, put together by a partnership between two Northern California-based companies, is good for the environment and a bonus for shoppers, who can get their money back many times over. As an article in the August edition of National Geographic points out, reusable bags are recognized as the most environmentally friendly choice for grocery bags. And since the bags are made in California, we are cutting back on fossil fuels and traffic by not transporting them long distances."

A highly-popular Bay Area institution until Albertson's, Inc. rebranded the stores in 1999, Lucky stores were known for their high quality products at extremely competitive prices. Save Mart intends to restore that heritage. Earlier this year Save Mart acquired 130 Albertsons stores, and exclusive rights to use the Lucky name in its markets, from Albertson's LLC. Save Mart plans on offering the Bring Back BagĀ® in all 252 of its Save Mart, Food Maxx and Lucky stores throughout California and Nevada by the end of the year.

Save Mart is a locally owned and operated company that has been in the grocery business for more than 50 years. The Save Mart team understands the California consumer because they are Californians. Save Mart is a California-based grocery operation which is family-owned and privately held. Save Mart is a market leader in the Central Valley. The company was founded January 17, 1952 in Modesto and today operates 252 stores throughout Northern California and Northern Nevada under the banner names of Albertsons, Food Maxx, Lucky, Save Mart and S-Mart Foods from its headquarters in Modesto.

About Roplast Industries:
Roplast Industries' fully integrated 130,000 square foot manufacturing and corporate office is located in Oroville, California, 60 miles north of Sacramento in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. The company's manufacturing plant is accredited by the California Film Extruders & Converters Association's Environmentally Preferred Rating (EPR) program, as complying with the most environmentally sensitive manufacturing practices. EPR accreditation is an industry "seal of approval," given to plastic makers that meet strict environmental standards certifying that they maintain environmentally sensitive production facilities. For more information on EPR, visit http://www.EPRaccredited.org For more information on Roplast Industries, including the company's environmental perspective and product line, visit http://www.roplast.com

Posted by Industrial-Manufacturing at July 30, 2007 05:39 AM

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