As the Twin Cities supermarket battle heats up, who is No. 1? With cash in hand due to the pandemic, the competition between companies heats up in the metro. May 8, 2021 8:34am Text size Copy shortlink:
The pandemic not only increased grocery profits as restrictions forced people to eat at home, it also intensified an already competitive market in the Twin Cities.
It s difficult to tell which supermarket chain takes the top spot in the market. Cub says it is at the top of a Nielsen market survey. Target edged out Cub, according to Chain Store Guide, which measures market share in a different way.
marketable skills. for adult prisoners, we have the alaska corrections industries which is the furniture shop where they learn the skills of woodworking. but they really learn the skills of going to work every day, giving a full day s job. some of these guys are the highest-paid guys in the institution. we start off at 85 cents an hour and it goes from there. greg houck has supervised the alaska correctional industries furniture shop for the last five years. we sell to private businesses, oil fields, related industries. close to $500,000 a year for the sales. since i ve been here, for five years. how long before you have all this cut, sewed up? by 10:00 tomorrow morning, cut up, sewed up. probably about another three hours. it s one of the most productive jobs here. one of the only places you can make something and somebody else assigns a dollar value to it. so you have bragging rights.
educational opportunities at spring creek. some long-time prisoners are also given the chance to develop marketable skills. for adult prisoners, we have the alaska corrections industries which is the furniture shop where they learn the skills of woodworking. but they really learn the skills of going to work every day, giving a full day s job. some of these guys are the highest-paid guys in the institution. we start off at 85 cents an hour and it goes from there. greg houck has supervised the alaska correctional industries furniture shop for the last five years. we sell to private businesses, oil fields, related industries. close to $500,000 a year for the sales. since i ve been here, for five years. how long before you have all this cut, sewed up? by 10:00 tomorrow morning, cut up, sewed up. probably about another three hours.
some long-time prisoners are also given the chance to develop marketable skills. for adult prisoners, we have the alaska corrections industries which is the furniture shop where they learn the skills of woodworking. but they really learn the skills of going to work every day, giving a full day s job. some of these guys are the highest-paid guys in the institution. we start off at 85 cents an hour and it goes from there. greg houck has supervised the alaska correctional industries furniture shop for the last five years. we sell to private businesses, oil fields, related industries. close to $500,000 a year for the sales. since i ve been here, for five years. how long before you have all this cut, sewed up? by 10:00 tomorrow morning, cut up, sewed up. probably about another three hours. it s one of the most productive jobs here.
furniture shop where they learn the skills of woodworking. but they really learn the skills of going to work every day, giving a full day s job. some of these guys are the highest-paid guys in the institution. we start off at 85 cents an hour and it goes from there. greg houck has supervised the alaska correctional industries furniture shop for the last five years. we sell to private businesses, oil fields, related industries. close to $500,000 a year for the sales. since i ve been here, for five years. how long before you have all this cut, sewed up? by 10:00 tomorrow morning, cut up, sewed up. probably about another three hours. it s one of the most productive jobs here. one of the only places you can make something and somebody else assigns a dollar value to it. so you have bragging rights. so to speak. you have to have work. you have to have a purpose. and sometimes here they lose