Some US states not running on Dunkin' doughnuts due to temporary supply 
		shortage
						
		 
		
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		 [January 11, 2025]  By 
		MARGERY A. BECK 
						
		OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Dunkin' dropped the “Donuts” from its brand name 
		years ago. Now — at least across Nebraska, New Mexico and some other 
		states — it doesn’t have doughnuts on the shelves either. 
		 
		Dunkin' stores in Omaha, Lincoln and Grand Island in Nebraska all had no 
		doughnuts in their cases Thursday and Friday and put up signs on their 
		doors and drive-thru kiosks informing customers that the pastries were 
		unavailable “due to a manufacturing error.” Some locations did offer 
		“Munchkins,” or doughnut holes, on Friday. 
		 
		Tyler Raikar, of Omaha, stopped by a Dunkin' in west Omaha early Friday 
		after an overnight shift as a phlebotomist, seeking coffee and a 
		chocolate cake doughnut. 
		 
		“What? No doughnuts!” she exclaimed when told the location had none. 
		“That's tragic!” 
		 
		The trip wasn't a total loss, she said, as she was more interested in 
		the coffee. Still, she was a little disappointed that she couldn't get a 
		doughnut. 
		 
		“Hopefully they have them soon,” she said. 
		 
		Throughout Albuquerque, New Mexico, and the surrounding suburbs, store 
		after store confirmed there’s a doughnut drought. Some employees chalked 
		it up to a supply chain issue and others said simply that delivery 
		trucks had been arriving without the cargo that the chain is most famous 
		for. Employees said they hoped stocks would be replenished by next week. 
						
		
		  
						
		A manager at the west Omaha Dunkin' location said Friday that she could 
		not give more information on the cause of the shortage, citing orders 
		from Dunkin's corporate headquarters. The manager, who did not give her 
		name, said the shortage was a national problem. 
		 
		But checks of locations in other regions, including St. Joseph, 
		Missouri, and Boston — where Dunkin' has a near cult-like following — 
		found no shortage of the sweet treats. 
		 
		
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            Two donuts and a cup of coffee rest on a counter at a Dunkin' 
			location, Friday, Jan. 10, 2025, in Derry, N.H. (AP Photo/Charles 
			Krupa) 
            
			  Dunkin’ is one of the world’s 
			largest coffee and doughnut brands, with more than 13,200 
			restaurants. The company, which was founded in Massachusetts in 
			1950, was purchased for $11.3 billion in 2020 by Atlanta private 
			equity firm Inspire Brands, which also owns Arby’s and Buffalo Wild 
			Wings. 
			 
			Jack D’Amato, a spokesperson for Inspire Brands, said there was an 
			issue with doughnuts from a single supplier that impacted stores in 
			Nebraska and some other states, although he did not name the other 
			states. About 4% of Dunkin’s U.S. stores were impacted, he said. 
			Dunkin’ has more than 9,500 stores nationwide. 
			 
			D’Amato said the company was still looking into what the issue was 
			and exactly how many stores were affected. But he said the company 
			has already begun restocking some affected stores. 
			 
			Previously known as Dunkin' Donuts, the company announced in 2018 
			that it was dropping “Donuts” from its name as part of a rebranding 
			effort to increase focus on its coffee and other drinks, which made 
			up of a majority of its sales. 
			 
			Phone and email messages to Bryce Bares, who owns several Dunkin' 
			franchises in Nebraska, were not immediately returned. 
			 
			Bares told the Omaha World-Herald that some Dunkin’ stores received 
			products from suppliers that were not up to standard and that he 
			would not serve them to customers. He told the newspaper that the 
			supply partners had corrected the problem and that his Nebraska 
			locations should be offering doughnuts again soon. 
			 
			___ 
			 
			AP writers Dee-Ann Durbin, in Detroit; Michael Casey, in Boston; and 
			Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, New Mexico, contributed to this 
			report. 
			
			
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