NEW YORKERS ORDERING PLENTY OF SNACKS, WINE AHEAD OF STORM.
New Yorkers have been busily placing
orders with grocery delivery services like FreshDirect and delivery.com,
not only snapping up staples like bread and milk but stocking up on
comfort indulgences like ice cream, snacks and candy, and alcohol, the
businesses tell NBC 4.
FreshDirect
says that compared to last week, orders were up this week by 40 percent
for ice cream, 63 percent for snacks and candy and 57 percent for
alcohol.
Of those snacks, the biggest spikes were in red wine, pita chips, chocolate-covered graham crackers and peanut M&Ms.
At delivery.com,
grocery and alcohol orders were up 30 percent Thursday over an average
Thursday. And alcohol orders were up 10 percent over an average January
day.
People
ordered 40 percent more batteries than in an average week at
delivery.com, and three times more lightbulbs, the company said.
"We believe
customers are waiting today (Friday, closer to the storm) to stock up on
more perishable items," said Kate McGee, vice president of marketing.
Instacart,
the grocery-ordering app service, usually sees an increase of 20 to 30
percent in order volumes before large storms, with more customers buying
comfort food like baked goods, cheese and chocolate, it said.
Meanwhile, food takeout service Grubhub says restaurants will be continuing deliveries during the storm, though some may amend their hours.
"We
hope diners will be patient if their orders take longer than normal to
arrive, given the possibility of street closures impacting the route
taken by their delivery person," said Grubhub spokeswoman Katie Norris.
"We encourage diners to be generous and appreciative when tipping and
readily available in case delivery people have questions."
Homer Logistics,
a restaurant delivery service currently catering to midtown and
Chelsea, says restaurants are in fact expecting a big bump in delivery
volume.
"One
owner told us that if we didn't think we could run delivery service it
wouldn't be worth it to open because he thought so little of his traffic
would be in store," said Home Logistics spokeswoman Marisa Claire
Smith.
FreshDirect and
Peapod were suspending some of their weekend deliveries, while the
others say they'll continue to monitor weather conditions and keep
customers up to date.
In
the meantime, brick-and-mortar supermarkets were seeing elbow-to-elbow
activity in some areas, a typical scene ahead of snowstorms. Photos
posted to social media showed long lines and some shelves cleared of
staples like bottled water and beverages.
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