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A Texas grocery chain keeps running in the chaos of Hurricane Harvey

carpro

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https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/inside-story-what-took-keep-texas-grocery-chain-running-chip-cutter


The inside story of what it took to keep a Texas grocery chain running in the chaos of Hurricane Harvey



In Texas, a grocery chain is now inspiring memes.

One goes like this: "State and federal resources are struggling to get into impacted areas. H.E.B. — outta the way, we're coming."

Another adds: "I’ll see your FEMA and Red Cross and raise you my Texas grocery store chain."

The images refer to the largest grocer in the state, H-E-B, with about 350 stores scattered throughout Texas and Mexico. At a time when retail watchers question the future of brick-and-mortar stores due to Amazon's continued ascendance, the 112-year-old retailer is drawing widespread praise after managing to open 60 of its 83 stores in Houston last Sunday, hours after Hurricane Harvey slammed into the city as a Category 4 storm. (At this point, 79 of the 83 stores are now open.)

When employees couldn't get to work, some stores still operated with as few as five people: one stationed at the door as crowd control and four working the registers, trying to get people out as quickly as possible.

On Saturday morning, I spoke with Scott McClelland, a 27-year H-E-B veteran who is president of the chain's Houston division. For much of the week, he had worked from 5 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., with days blurring together.

The behind-the-scenes operation, as he told me, is a complicated dance involving multiple command centers, a helicopter, private planes, military style vehicles and frequent calls to suppliers, urging them to send toilet paper — and to skip the Funyuns.
 

TCassidy

Late-Administator Emeritus
Administrator
HEB is owned by the Butt family. The presumed CEO Howard Jr. resigned to become a missionary. They are Baptists.

He was drawn to the Christian youth movement in the 1940s while attending Baylor University and combined his business career with a second calling as a lay minister preaching at revivals and speaking nationally.

Howard Butt Jr. left the day-to-day operation of the grocery company and stepped into the vice chairmanship of H-E-B and chaired the H.E. Butt Foundation. Charles Butt eventually succeeded his father as H-E-B president in 1971 and chairman of the company in 1984.

The H.E. Butt Foundation was first operated by Howard Butt Jr.’s mother, Mary Holdsworth Butt. It is a separate entity from the H-E-B grocery chain. It operates programs ranging from free camps for disadvantaged children at a ranch along the Frio River to faith-based retreats for groups of people at Laity Lodge near Leakey, which opened in 1961. The foundation has helped build several hospitals, libraries and other philanthropic projects throughout South Texas.

Howard Butt Jr. became foundation president in 1982. In 2013, the foundation built Headwaters, a family camping facility.

The foundation expanded along with Howard Butt Jr.’s ministry. He spoke at an early National Prayer Breakfast during the Eisenhower Administration. He was a board member of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and a founding board member of Christianity Today magazine.

President John F. Kennedy appointed Howard Butt Jr. to the first Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity.
 
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