The 127 employees of Brach’s Supermarket, a kosher grocery store in Lawrence, are facing losing their jobs as the store is slated to close its doors this spring, according to a state regulatory filing.

The 40,000-square-foot store at 11 Lawrence Lane is scheduled to close by May 1, after nearly two decades of operation and the layoffs scheduled for the same time. The notice was posted Monday on the New York State Department of Labor’s website.

Mischa Gaus, political director for the Brooklyn-based United Food and Commercial Workers International Union Local 2013, which represents the workers, said Brach’s owes the employees two weeks’ pay as well as health insurance contributions. The union is pursuing the matter with the state labor department, Gaus said.

“We are going to make sure our members are paid every dollar that they are owed,” Gaus said Tuesday. “We are also going to assist in any way possible to make sure that our folks have a smooth transition to their next employment.”

Gaus also said that employees of the store have made concessions in order to work with the supermarket’s owners by sacrificing raises as well as their health care benefits.

Sam Brach, the kosher market’s founder, was a supermarket pioneer, butcher and Holocaust survivor, according to published reports. In 1959, Brach started off as a butcher in Kew Gardens Hills, Queens, and grew his small store into a kosher supermarket. He opened the Lawrence location in 1997, according to property records.

“I think this is a tragedy to see an independent business like this go out,” Gaus said. “We are very disappointed because we worked very hard to work with the employers.”