A shuttered Rite Aid store in New Lebanon, Ohio.
Kevin Williams
New Lebanon, Ohio, population 3,756, has three dollar stores, a Groceryland grocery store, a few fast-food restaurants, a public library branch, and a spirit-filled school system. What it doesn’t have is a pharmacy.
As part of Rite Aid’s bankruptcy filing in October 2023, the chain announced it was closing 800 stores, with Ohio especially hard hit, at 180 closings slated largely in struggling small towns or Rust Belt cities. According to Rite Aid’s website, the chain currently has 1,700 locations, down from the 2,111 reported at the time of bankruptcy. The company has stated it will emerge from bankruptcy with about 1,300 stores.
New Lebanon’s Rite Aid closed in September.
“My community needs a pharmacist. It is concerning to me that the residents don’t have one here,” said New Lebanon Mayor David Nickerson.
Some smaller towns near New Lebanon have their own pharmacies, but even those are a 15-minute drive away. New Lebanon’s Rite Aid prescriptions were transferred to a Walgreens 30 minutes away in Dayton.
Nickerson, who was just elected last year and has a military background, recently found himself walking the Walgreens parking lot in Dayton. He even strolled around the back of the building at night, doing a thorough inspection to tell his constituents he had done his due diligence and made sure it was a safe place to go. But even coming away convinced that Walgreens was safe and clean won’t be enough for some of New Lebanon’s residents.
“We have many elderly residents who are uncomfortable going that far with the traffic and unknown area,” Nickerson said.
Getting a prescription filled in New Lebanon, which sits on a busy thoroughfare leading to Dayton, wasn’t always so difficult.
“Before we moved to New Lebanon two years ago, there were three pharmacies,” said Joyce Dingman. “Last year New Lebanon’s CVS closed, and now Rite Aid is closing, leaving us with none.”
She and her husband will head to a town 30 minutes away to get prescriptions filled at a Kroger pharmacy.
A spokesman for Rite Aid confirmed the outsized impact the closings are having on Ohio.
“Nearly all our stores in Ohio will be closing by the end of September as part of our recent Chapter 11 process to create a stronger, healthier company,” the spokesman said, adding that there would only be four Rite Aids remaining in Ohio. There were over 140 before the latest round of closures.
New Lebanon, though, is hardly alone in its struggle to hold on to a pharmacy. Experts say the retail pharmacy model has been squeezed by complicated and sometimes lower reimbursement rates for medication while competition for sales of candy and paper towels, items that used to pad profits, has grown more fierce.
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