Personally, I think no one on this planet should go through their life without getting acquainted with ginger. I was debating the pros and cons of telling her what an awesome seasoning the tiny root makes but I stopped mid-thought when I saw my total bill. I was expecting a bill of less than $10 but I got billed twice the amount:

I would have walked out without making a fuss about any of this but I felt really ridiculous paying $6.46 for a piece of ginger as big as my thumb! I asked her to re-check. She weighed it twice but the total didn't change. One of the managers ambled over and agreed that it was an unreasonable amount to pay for ginger. After what looked like some super-involved physics and computing research, they found that the scale added more than 2lb to everything.
At that point, I should have just left that ginger piece on the counter, asked them for a refund and walked out. Quite unfortunately, however, my frugal shopping senses kicked in. I noticed that I had paid $6.47 for 3 medium tomatoes. I asked them if they could reweigh the other produce on my list.
For some mysterious reason the manager told me: "I will do the tomatoes but I am definitely not doing the onions!" My mind started meandering toward possible reasons. Did he have a massive allergy to onions? Did the peeling and almost psoriatic red onion skins gross him out? Was he psychologically traumatized by the flavour of onions? Why single out onions? Was he French? I was almost ready to pay this extra $10 to know the answer to this conundrum.

Moral of the story: Ginger helps you get some refunds but it can't help you solve elemental mysteries.
I'm glad to hear that you think they did the right thing and stopped using the scale.
To be fair, I did see them shut that checkout aisle (No. 14 near the North St. entrance of the store) after my weighing fiasco.
I am willing to give them the benefit of the doubt and believe that this was a one time error thing or that they have fixed it by now.
Anyway, this is a good reminder to always check grocery receipts/other receipts before gaily sailing out of any store.
You should report them to the State of New York for having a bad scale and I would suspect Erie County as well.
They violated your rights as a consumer. Any scale out of calibration should be immediately removed from use until repaired and all items weighed on it should be reweighed on another scale. The assumption is that the other scale is properly calibrated.
I would also complain to Price Rite corporate. :::link::: I would bet that the manager you dealt with did not follow company policy.
Remember if they did it to you, how many other people got false weights from the same scale today. And how many will get false weights tomorrow?