Atlanta's Food Deserts Leave Its Poorest Residents Stranded and Struggling
http://www.theguardian.com/cities/20...ggling-survive
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This comment was interesting… "why can we build multimillion-dollar highway systems and multibillion-dollar stadiums, but not more grocery stores? If we can build a museum dedicated to a soft drink and one that celebrates college football and another that trumpets civil rights, can't we help our neighbours with what seems to be a most essential and basic right: putting an affordable and healthy dinner on the table?"
Seems to suggest that grocery stores should now be built by the government in a similar manner as highway systems? Generally I would think most people would think of a grocery store as a business that should be built according to market forces and not something built by a government entity. Tax incentives, TIFF's, zoning regulations, etc. if the community see's a benefit to build a particular something, might be another matter. Also as someone who is now in the retail business, year and a half in, I find you sell what sells, or you perish. Despite what I may like or want to sell, if you put your money into it and it doesn't sell, then you quit trying to sell it and go with those items that are selling. If there is a demand for something and there is not someone in the area selling it…. that equals opportunity knocking for someone to make money. It is interesting that in similar types of neighborhoods in our city, similar design and housing stock, similar socio-economic class and poverty, that I see very different responses to these "food desert" issues. In the predominantly hispanic areas one can see food trucks, and I never see them in predominantly black areas… unless they are run by hispanics. Also you find small, locally run, grocery stores, often with a surprising amount of produce, in the hispanic areas, but then don't see a similar thing in the mostly black areas of town, that again have similar design and socio-economic levels. Another possible example of "they sell what sells" is there is a McDonalds that is convenient to my trip downtown that I sometimes go to, and another one in a wealthier part of town that I sometimes go to when I work there. I usually order the same thing "grilled chicken sandwich with no mayo and an iced tea, unsweetened". Actually quite tasty and a fairly healthy option. Never have a problem ordering that in the wealthier area, but in the poorer area, I am constantly asked at the drive thru to pull off to the side and they will bring me my food shortly, and often told they do not have unsweetened tea would I like sweetened tea instead. Finally asked why one time and they told me that it was because people rarely order unsweetened tea, and that they have to go to the back and get the grilled chicken because people don't often order that either. Couple of times I have driven off to find that I have sweetened tea and the breaded chicken sandwich with mayo lol. Definitely NOT a healthy option. Purely anecdotal I know, but interesting regardless. As for urban design sometimes being an impediment to the poor, I agree. It's been very frustrating to watch a certain poor, food desert, area of our city that has been targeted as one to incentivise with new redevelopment. Everything new that has gone in around this one corner has been auto centric… in an area with one of the lowest ratios of car ownership and highest percentage of people using transit! A health clinic was put in nearby and it was set far back from the road and surrounded by large parking lots. A new grocery store was built, yes given special financing and tax incentives by the city to go in, again, it was put far back from the corner with parking in front. Sadly the store went out of business. Right across from that a nice looking strip mall went in having special assistance from the city and other sources, again, instead of being up to the sidewalk and pedestrian friendly it was a typical, auto centric design with a parking lot in front, large drainage ditch/grassy berm in front of that, then the street. Even the people in the black community seemed to not realize the folly of this for they would be on TV all excited about getting this new shopping center and the jobs it would bring and opportunity it would bring to local business owners to be there, etc. But not a peep about how awful the "un-pedestrian friendly" design was from anyone. They were excited to be getting a strip mall that looked just like the ones in the wealthier parts of town. There were numerous new developments around this intersection. I kept watching in frustration as each, hard fought to materialize, project came to fruition. Frustration because of the missed opportunity to create a pedestrian/transit friendly, truly desirable and something to be proud of, development, instead became a blah, struggling, same ol same ol development. Other areas of town that are considered to be some of the "hottest" and most desirable ones are those that have a small strip of pedestrian friendly core (our Cherry Street and Brookside areas). Why someone in the city and development community, and the community at large in which all these new developments were going in, wanted a same ol same ol, auto centric development instead of what could have become something to be proud of and far more useful to that community, I don't for the life of me know. Frankly I think it was because of ignorance. The people who live nearby aren't going to enjoy walking to it, and those who take transit to the area will now find they are in a place that is not a pedestrian friendly one to get from one place to the next, to do various errands in. |
This is a fairly comprehensive article and describes the situation for many urban poor in Atlanta quite well. It should be noted that Atlanta also has some huge and comprehensive farmer's markets where thousands or people, rich and poor shop, notably Dekalb Int. Farmer's Market. But it is quite correct that many of these can only be reached by car or public transit. Density is one issue; the other is that in much of America the "local" neighborhood market has disappeared. In the mid century in the US, even in small towns there would be a small, but fairly comprehensive, food store (often run by a butcher or a green grocer) within a few minutes of walking, and quite often they would deliver directly to your house for a little fee. That pattern largely disappeared in the last quarter century.
Food stores are just one particular example; you could write the same story about dry clearers, shoe repair shops, hardware stores, photo shops, movie theaters, etc. Neighborhood is just a concept and in some cities it is defined by the car. The real question is whether this pattern of growth and access to goods has essentially redefined the experience of poverty for those who are poor? |
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When it comes to Wall Street bonuses we must honor contracts, but when it comes to honoring pension obligations contracts don't matter. The "invisible hand" is really the hand of the rich taking money out of the pockets of the rest of us. |
What is stopping some forward-thinking residents of these food deserts from starting a bodega or something similar?
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Residents may be poor and transient and the kind of person who has the money and interest in local issues would move out or invest in something else.
My idea for this problem would be some kind of mobile store or super duper vending machine, like a bookmobile for good food. The civic group or government would pay to get it built but then when it's not being used in needy areas it would earn profit at big events selling something more in demand. I don't know how these things work, but perhaps you could license the design and partner with the builder to get money too. |
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This study sounds suspect to me in regards to our particular situation here... |
There are lots of valid approaches to this problem of lack of convenient access to services including food in areas of poverty. But, I would reiterate, that these are not issues of food and services. As others have pointed out here, the underlying problems are much more systemic and relate to general issues of poverty and differential wealth distribution in our country. in essence, adding a few grocers here and there, or food trucks, are just band aids for the more generic problems of poverty and inequity. In my area of expertise, medicine and public health, the difference in health outcomes between the rich and poor in the US is astonishing and pathetic and mirrors the situation described about food access. These issues have to be addressed at multiple levels, social, cultural and political. The problems are manifested in urban areas like Atlanta and in other cities, but they are not unique to cities and in my view individual cities can only make limited changes to these generic problems. Community groups and locals can make a difference, albeit rather limited.
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A comment following the article:
http://discussion.theguardian.com/co...alink/33200239 Quote:
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^ so, what are you trying to say...
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The bottom line for grocery stores is they are a low-margin business highly dependent on internal cross-subsidies and have little or no pricing power.
The consumers who buy the higher priced goods probably also have a car and will happily drive to Costco or Wal-Mart or where-ever to save some money. The captive market that is going to buy white bread and kraft dinner can't keep the lights on. |
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I imagine that it's the same reason that kids often don't start lemonade stands. You need a permit for that and permits are expensive. I don't know why some people are whining about the free market. We don't have a (completely) free market. Opening a food store isn't free. If the authorities found out that you were selling food to your neighborhood without a permit or permission or a license or whatever you need they would shut you down so fast it would make your head spin. Lots of these arguments about the rich stealing from the poor and free market conspiracies were very captivating when I was ripping bong hits as a college freshman and thought I knew everything. But markets and wealth distribution are not zero sum. And as ukw pointed out above, grocers spend a great deal of time studying what sells in their stores. It's their jobs to know that. They don't buy what doesn't sell. Fresh organic produce is a luxury in big cities and it priced as such. |
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How many people who opposed that Wal-Mart, the nation's largest grocer, in Chicago, also are worried about the food desert in Chicago?
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An eerily similar piece appeared in a local newspaper two years ago: http://clatl.com/freshloaf/archives/...s-food-deserts. It's kind of old news. :) |
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