Families are walking up to locked doors. Workers are getting emails that end their livelihoods. Neighborhoods already on the edge are losing their last affordable option overnight. Walmart is closing 22 stores this year, from Chicago to Richmond, Virginia — and for many, it feels like abandonment, not just business. The official reason? “Poor financial performan
For the people who shopped and worked there, “poor financial performance” doesn’t feel like an explanation; it feels like a verdict. In Chicago, four stores are disappearing from communities that already struggle for access to fresh food and basic necessities. In Richmond, Virginia, the Brook Road Neighborhood Market will go dark on July 28, leaving regulars scrambling to find where to go next and employees racing to replace lost income.
Walmart’s carefully worded gratitude, delivered through a spokesperson’s email, can’t soften the shock of a parking lot that suddenly empties forever. To executives, each location is a line on a balance sheet. To everyone else, it’s a pharmacy, a paycheck, a place to see familiar faces. When the lights go out in 22 of thes