Keith, I was referring to c41 chemicals. And I've been in the store plenty of times. I'm not sure the last time you've bought a kodak 5L e-6 kit but they don't carry those either. That's only based on calling and speaking with the people in the back and searching the shelves myself.
What c-41 kit? If there is a kodak c-41 kit, what's the product number? The only way I can get c-41 chemicals (no kits) through Samy's is a special order and that requires I buy a lot including 16 bottles of final rinse! That's coming from Juan in Pasadena last week. I've yet to get details about the remaining chemicals but it's going to be $$$$$. I don't shoot that much color neg so this all may not be worth it.
I will check the shelf this evening at Samy's Pasadena for Kodak C-41 Flexicolor chemistry. Perhaps they are out of final rinse, but developer, bleach, and fixer were there last week. It is a 10 L developer kit, which is easily sectioned up. (I mix 2 L at a time.) I have never purchased an entire C-41 "kit" from Kodak, so I do not know if they exist. Just a three-part developer kit, and separate bleach, fixer, and final rinse (previously called stabilizer).
The last time I bought Kodak E-6 off the shelf at Freestyle was perhaps 3 or 4 months ago, and I ordered two kits from Samy's once ($109 after tax). I always got my Kodak C-41 at Samy's (most recently, Pasadena, and Fairfax before that).
Buying 16 bottles of final rinse is really not all too expensive, and the stuff only lasts 8 weeks once mixed, so you will eventually use it.
If you don't shoot much color neg, home processing is probably not worth the mild savings you will get doing small quantities. The real economy comes with a high volume of use. I get at least 40 rolls and/or 80 4x5 sheets (almost always a mix) out of every gallon of C-41 chems that I mix up, or else I don't bother doing it.
If you need a gallon kit just to get you through a specific project, let me know. I have about a dozen that I stockpiled on hearing of their discontinuance. I also have plenty of the old stabilizer, if you are using older films that require it.