Sep 01, 2022

State forces closure of Rush County’s only grocery store

Posted Sep 01, 2022 12:00 PM
The State of Kansas forced the Rush County Grocery to close Aug. 30, 2022 due to "failure to keep up on sales tax."
The State of Kansas forced the Rush County Grocery to close Aug. 30, 2022 due to "failure to keep up on sales tax."

By COLE REIF
Great Bend Post

The only grocery store in Rush County is now closed, but local officials are doing everything possible to find new owners to reopen the store as soon as possible.

The Rush County Grocery, in La Crosse, was forced to shut down Tuesday because of back-taxes. Owner Henry Montiel mentioned on the store’s social media account that the State of Kansas forced the shutdown and seized all accounts for failure to keep up with sales tax.

Rush County Economic Development Administrator Brad Penka said having the grocery store closed for the foreseeable future is a huge blow to the community.

"We're progressing, trying to help with the sale," said Penka. "This kind of hit me out of the blue so we're not sure how this is going to affect it. We want to get something open as soon as possible. It's a very viable store. It's very important to the community. We have a lot of older people in the community that can't go out of town."

Montiel, a 1994 graduate of La Crosse High School, moved back to his hometown in 2018 to manage the grocery store. Montiel and his wife took over ownership of the store in July 2021.

The Rush County Grocery has been up for sale the last couple of months, looking for new owners.

"I already heard people say 'why didn't someone do something to help?'" said Penka. "The tax situation is a whole different thing. That's outside of anything we can do. Our economic group helped with the store when it was sold a few years ago. We helped find an owner and we're hoping to do the same thing again."

On his social media post, Montiel apologized to patrons for the closure and thanked them for their support.

"Having a small business and trying to keep everything running and all the bills paid got the best of me..." Montiel stated in the post. "...That's the reason I put the store up for sale was to let someone else with better knowledge and better business sense to come in and take over."

Penka added there has been interest from a few potential owners to take over the store on Main Street, and county officials are looking to reopen the store as soon as possible.

If interested in owning the grocery store, citizens can call Rush County Economic Development at 785-222-2808 and they will get you in contact with the real estate agent.