Bashas' United Drugs Pharmacy
USINFO | 2013-11-29 16:49
 
At Bashas' United Drugs Pharmacy, you have a friend for life. We are committed to consistently providing you with the best overall pharmacy experience in a convenient setting to ease your busy lifestyle. Plus, get your prescriptions filled while you shop!

Visit Bashas' United Drugs Pharmacy for:
  • Generic Med Plan – competitive pricing on the medications you buy most

  • Printouts for your flexible spending accounts or yearly tax printouts

  • We take special orders on hard-to-find products – just ask!

  • Pharmacists available for consultation

  • Professional compounding for hard-to-find prescriptions

  • We bill workers compensation prescriptions at no cost to you

  • AutoFill – fill your prescription fast!

  • Easily transfer your prescription from another pharmacy

  • Free Pre-Natal Vitamins for the mom-to-be!


We accept over 1,000 third-party insurance plans and cover all major plans such as:

  • Tricare

  • Mercy Care of Arizona

  • Blue Cross Blue Shield

  • Humana

  • Medicare Part D

  • Workers Compensation


Bashas' supermarket

Bashas' Inc.

Type

Private

Industry

Retail

Founded

1932

Headquarters

Chandler, Arizona

Number of locations

132

Key people

Edward Basha III, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board [2]

Products

Grocery

Employees

9,085 [3]

Website

bashas.com



A Bashas' Supermarket inArizona.

Bashas' is a family-owned grocery store chain, primarily located in Arizona, with two locations outside the state — one each in Needles, California, and Crownpoint, New Mexico. Its headquarters are in unincorporated Maricopa County, Arizona, near Chandler.[1][2]
 

Bashas' history
Najeeb Basha immigrated to the United States from Lebanon in 1886; he and his wife Najeeby moved to Arizona in 1910. The family struggled for years in retail sales in the Arizona mining towns of Ray and Sonora, facing numerous setbacks, but remained determined in succeeding. The first store to officially incorporate the Bashas' name opened in 1932 in Goodyear, Arizona, as a company store, where employees of J. G. Boswell could purchase groceries withcompany scrip. Bashas' was founded by Najeeb and Najeeby's sons, Ike and Eddie Basha, Sr. Upon the death of Eddie Sr., leadership was taken over by Eddie Basha, Jr.. Eddie Jr. died in March 2013,[3] and the CEO is now Eddie Jr.'s son, Eddie Basha III.
 

Bashas' today
The Bashas' Family of Stores includes four distinct formats: Bashas', Bashas' Diné, AJ's Fine Foods and Food City. The company has more than 130 stores serving every county in Arizona, as well as Needles, California, and Crownpoint, New Mexico. The company recently added a new format called Bashas' Farmers Market. This newest format is only in Prescott, Payson, and Winslow. With all the layoffs in 2009 and store closures, Bashas' employees total approximately 8,500.
Bashas' has doubled in size in the last decade with stores under the Bashas' name, as well as AJ's Fine Foods, and Food City, bringing the total to more than 130 stores.
Most Bashas' stores are non-union; however, nine stores that Bashas' acquired from previous chains continue to be represented by the United Food and Commercial Workers, which campaigns against the chain. In October 2007, an Administrative Law Judge sided with the UFCW and an NLRB ruling that Bashas' violated federal law by withdrawing recognition to the UFCW at the inherited stores[4].
In March 2013 Bashas' named Edward Basha III, President, CEO and Chairman of the Board. Darl Andersen, who had been President and CEO will assume the role of Executive Adviser to the President and Chairman. Edward Basha III was formerly Vice President, Retail Operations. Robert Ortiz will assume the role of Senior Vice President, Operations. Ortiz was previously Vice President, Sales and Marketing and will be succeeded by Jim Vaughan with the title of Senior Vice President, Procurement and Marketing. He had been President of the Super Saver group of stores. In addition, Don Ulrich has been named Executive Chief Operating Officer. 
 

Chapter 11 filing
On July 12, 2009, Bashas' filed for bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11, citing the weak economy, increased competition, and their ongoing legal fight with the UFCW union. In doing so, the company plans on closing ten under-performing Bashas' and Food City stores. The company emerged from bankruptcy in late 2010.
 

Slogans
Bashas', Bashas' Diné Markets: "Where You've Got a Friend"; "From Our Family to Yours Since 1932"; "Sensational Savings... and Service too!"
AJ'S Fine Foods: "Experience the Difference"; "The Purveyors of Fine Foods"
Food City: "Mucho Value!"
Bashas' Supermarkets are traditional grocery stores.
Bashas' also has a Distribution Center, located in Chandler, which includes over 16 acres (65,000 m2) of under-roof space, as well as a full mechanic shop. The perishables area of the Center is temperature- and climate-controlled and includes ripening rooms and areas that vary in temperature from a base temperature of 55 °F year-round to freezer rooms of -10 °F.
 

AJ'S Fine Foods
AJ's Fine Foods are gourmet and specialty stores. The stores feature chef-prepared entrees, an extensive wine collection with trained cellar staff, and specialty baked goods. These are the few former Bayless Markets left.
 

Food City
Food City was acquired by Bashas' in 1993. Since acquiring the original Food City store, several Bashas' stores have been converted to this format. Food City offers a full range of ethnic and Hispanic food varieties. Although there is nothing in the name that suggests that the store focuses on Hispanic foods, inside most stores offer various Hispanic-themed foods. Some of these stores were previously Bayless Markets.
In response, Kroger-owned Fry's Food and Drug another Arizona competitor has launched "Fry's Mercado" as a competitor to the Hispanic food market.
The Food City locations outside of Arizona are unrelated.
 

Bashas' Diné Markets
Bashas' Diné Markets are located on the Navajo Nation.[5] They specialize in the needs of Navajo customers with products such as Blue Bird flour for fry bread, mutton and wool. Stores are labeled in both Navajo and English.
 

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