PCC Community Markets has officially updated all of its long-standing product standards to add specific details and requirements bolstering each policy, as well as updating older policies and scheduling new reviews.
These reviews are carried out by the cooperative grocer’s Quality Standards Committee, an internal cross-departmental forum that discusses social and sustainability concerns regarding products and the supply chain. Committee members, who include office leadership and staff, and represent PCC’s merchandising, operations, communications and social and environmental responsibility teams meet monthly.
The product standards’ new requirements include the following:
“Not many grocers have publicly available standards that are focused on sustainability, and setting criteria for health, environmental benefits, animal welfare, toxics concerns,” noted Rebecca Robinson, PCC’s senior product sustainability specialist, in the May 2022 issue of the co-op’s Sound Consumer publication. “The main goal and purpose was to articulate what we’re doing and what our merchandisers do.”
Last month, PCC detailed its social, economic and environmental progress in its annual report.
Seattle-based PCC, a certified-organic retailer, has 16 stores in the Puget Sound-area cities of Bellevue, Bothell, Burien, Edmonds, Issaquah, Kirkland, Redmond and Seattle. The Seattle stores are in the neighborhoods of Ballard, Central District, Columbia City, Downtown, Fremont, Green Lake, View Ridge and West Seattle. The co-op also plans to open a new store in Madison Valley.
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