Market 32 Issues Voluntary Recall of Pizza

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SCHENECTADY, N.Y. — Price Chopper/Market 32 is issuing a voluntary recall on a variety of store-made "corner to corner" pizzas, manufactured on July 2, 2023. 
 
The products are being recalled because the manufacturer of the pizza dough, Deiorio's, has advised that foreign materials, fragments of a conveyer belt used in the manufacturing process, may be found in the dough. There are no known harmful side effects from the products but customers who purchased them can return them to their local Price Chopper/Market 32 store for a full refund. 
 
The full listing of UPCs impacted by the recall is attached.
 
Many of the customers who purchased these items have already been contacted through Price Chopper/Market 32's Broadnet recall notification program, which uses purchase data and consumer phone numbers on file in connection with the company's AdvantEdge (loyalty) card to alert those households that may have purchased the products in question.
 
For more information, please contact Price Chopper/Market 32 at 800.666.7667 or via email at consumerresponse@pricechopper.com.
 
Affected UPCs
23314
23317
23320
23325
23330
23331
23334
23338
23340
23344
23382
23750
23751
23752
23753
23754
27104
23104
23105
23107
23303
23304
23309
27738500000
29730100000
29730200000
29730400000
29730700000
29730900000
29734000000
29739300000
29739500000
29739900000
29741000000
29742000000
29743000000
29744000000
29748300000
20739100000
20739200000
20739300000
20739400000
20739500000
21561100000
22748600000
23738500000
23738600000
23748600000
24738600000
25738600000
26738500000
26738600000
27738500000
29738600000
29744100000
29730500000
21561200000
29730600000
21649800000
16104
23301
23311
23335
23336
23380
25738500000
25738700000
29732000000
29733000000
21738500000
21748600000
22738500000
23315
20738500000
29745000000
23390
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Child-Care Providers Want Mental Health Support, Better Wages

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Education Secretary Patrick Tutwiler and Early Education and Care Commissioner Amy Kershaw host a listening session on early child care at BCC on Wednesday.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Local child-care providers called for mental health support and equitable pay at a listening session with state officials this week. 

"We don't provide resources for our educators so that they have a strength in the classroom. They're putting out fires constantly. How are they educating? How are they teaching?" said Elise Weller, senior director of child care services at 18 Degrees.

"The social-emotional development of these children is so important."

Katherine Von Haefen, director of community impact at Berkshire United Way, said a single parent with school-aged children needs to make between $70,000 and $80,000 annually just to meet basic needs and a great many local parents are not making that mark — including teachers.

"Just over half of our population now in Berkshire County is considered to be economically challenged, working yet still struggling to make ends meet. Too many of our local educators are part of this economically challenged population," she said.

"Frequently we hear directors sharing stories of staff refusing raises or bonuses so that they do not lose out on key benefits. This is not OK. Early childhood compensation is truly a very complicated issue and one that frankly, has not yet been fully successfully addressed across the country. It's one that's complicated yet, we still need to look at a variety of possible solutions. Multiple solutions that can be piloted and road tested before engaging in large-scale efforts."

Education Secretary Patrick Tutwiler and Early Education and Care Commissioner Amy Kershaw hosted the childcare listening session Wednesday at Berkshire Community College. The panel also included state Outdoor Recreation Director Paul Jahnige, Alvina Brevard of the state Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities, and Undersecretary of Education Mark Reilly.

"We know that there are some really difficult barriers facing this particular field: accessibility, affordability for families, opportunity, and so we will be discussing, I'm sure, all of that," BCC President Ellen Kennedy said.

"I am particularly committed to this. I am the parent of a son who is now in his thirties with a son who was at a child-care center but my son went in at eight weeks old and I have shared on one or two occasions that it was the professionals in the child-care center that made me a better parent, that actually taught me how to parent, and I am forever in their debt for the ways in which they helped me help my son."

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