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Introducing the Healthy Food Access Portal, the nation’s first website dedicated to improving and promoting healthy food retail

May 14, 2013 in News, News & Events, Resources

Dear Partner,

The Food Trust and our partners PolicyLink and The Reinvestment Fund invite you to visit the new Healthy Food Access Portal!

The new portal connects community leaders, healthy food retailers, policymakers and advocates to an extensive array of resources and strategies to improve and increase access to healthy food retail (including supermarkets, corner stores, farmers’ markets and mobile produce trucks) in underserved communities. With funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the three organizations created the nation’s first comprehensive website and learning community designed to promote healthy food retail efforts in regions across the country.

There will also be an accompanying introductory webinar, Knowing the Basics: Food Access 101, next week.  The webinar will discuss the problem of healthy food access and the innovative solutions being developed to address the issue. Designed as an introduction to the field of healthy food access, the webinar will also feature a discussion on how to make the case for healthy food retail solutions in local communities.

Fresh, Healthy Food: Coming to a Corner Store Near You

April 8, 2013 in News, News & Events

At 30 years old, Brianna Almaguer Sandoval has transformed hundreds of Philadelphia-area corner stores into oases of fresh, healthy foods for low-resourced communities. Leading The Food Trust’s Healthy Corner Store Initiative, Brianna is forging a path-breaking and replicable new paradigm for corner stores, as she provides the education, tools, and financial support corner stores need to increase their availability of fresh fruits and vegetables. Under Brianna’s direction, the program has flourished from 11 stores to the nation’s largest corner store initiative with over 680 stores. Brianna has created the 21st century community-based blueprint to drive healthy eating habits and solve America’s critical food gap.

Watch the video here.

For more information about Growing Green, visit the NRDC website here.

Truly healthier ‘hoods?

July 18, 2012 in News, News & Events

Northeast Times Star, July 18, 2012.

Several of Philadelphia’s nutrition initiatives, including its Healthy Corner Stores Initiative, are profiled in this article. Currently 630 stores are participating in the program by adding at least four new healthy items to their shelves. One of Philadelphia’s healthy corner stores is profiled. The store owner interviewed reports that so far the healthy food has sold well: “People are very happy…More children are choosing grapes and watermelon and stuff.”

Will Philadelphia’s experiment in eradicating ‘food deserts’ work?

June 8, 2012 in News, News & Events

The Washington Post, June 8, 2012.

Philadelphia has invested $900,000 into more than 600 corner stores, in an effort to help people make healthier eating choices. Philadelphia has the highest obesity rate and the most poor people of any big American city, and the city sees healthy corner store initiatives as one way to improve the food environment. In many ways, Philadelphia is seen as an epicenter of the efforts to improve public health by creating better access to healthy foods.

Although healthy food access projects seem to be gaining traction, research done to date on such food desert interventions has not clearly shown that access to healthy foods causes significant improvements in eating behavior or obesity rates. Government officials are carefully watching for new research to see if this strategy is a worthwhile investment. A new study being conducted in Philadelphia will have significant sway in these decisions.

Philadelphia is “conducting the largest study to date of what happens when nutritious options are introduced into neighborhoods that have traditionally gone without. It’s measuring what people bought before, what they’re eating now and whether that improves…. Temple University’s Center for Obesity Research is working with the city to study how shopping habits do, or don’t, change when healthy options are introduced. Last year, before stores added nutritious options, researchers stopped 7,000 shoppers on their way out of the store to look at their purchases. With the new foods now available, researchers are doing another 7,000 stops.”

The results of this study will be published in about a year.

Kansas C-stores Join Salt Reduction Efforts

May 23, 2012 in News, News & Events

Convenience Store News, May 23, 2012.

The Shawnee County Health Agency in Topeka, Kansas, is working with convenience stores to reduce the community’s salt intake. In October 2012, the CDC awarded the state of Kansas a Sodium Reduction in Communities grant to work with Shawnee county. Grants were also awarded to New York City; Los Angeles; the state of California, to work with Shasta County; and the state of New York, to work with Broome and Schenectady counties. A Shawnee county public health educator said many convenience stores were resistant to participating at first, saying that customers don’t usually ask for low-sodium foods. But the stores that were interested in participating have been very enthusiastic about the process. Now, more than a dozen stores are participating in the project. The stores feature a stand-alone rack filled with healthy, low-sodium snack options near the front of the store. The organizers of the project will provide the racks, promotional signs, technical assistance, and advertising.

Bodegas Become Frontlines Against Obesity

May 10, 2012 in News, News & Events

New Hampshire Public Radio, May 10, 2012.

This radio piece features Manchester Healthy Corner Stores, a pilot project organized by the Manchester Department of Public Health in  New Hampshire. The project encourages bodegas to sell healthier foods, and to display these options prominently. A professional grocery consultant offered free advice to participating store owners, as part of the project. One of the challenges so far has been to figure out how to convince customers to buy healthier foods when they are surrounded by so many more unhealthy options.

The Healthy Corner Stores project is just one aspect of the public health department’s bigger plan to make Manchester more livable; it is also working to transform the built environment in a way that encourages people to be more active, adding crosswalks and installing traffic calming measures.

What Will Make The Food Desert Bloom?

May 1, 2012 in News, News & Events

All Things Considered, National Public Radio. May 1, 2012.

Listen to this story profiling The Food Trust’s healthy corner store work in Philadelphia. The idea of improving access to healthy foods to people living in food deserts has gotten a lot of attention lately. But community food activists understand ”it takes a combination of access, innovation, and education to change peoples’ habits for the better.” The Food Trust has helped bring supermarkets to underserved areas, and is working with hundreds of corner stores to stock and promote healthy choices:

“On several store racks, there are signs that rate products green, yellow, or red, based on how nutritious they are. And there are flashy little cards with recipes for how to use some of the most nutritious ingredients. Each of these meals should feed a family of four and cost about five dollars.”

The story highlights the complexity of changing food habits.

County effort helps convenience get healthier

April 30, 2012 in News, News & Events

 

Program works to put fruit, veggies in small stores to encourage better habits

The Columbian, April 30, 2012.

Clark County Public Health’s Healthy Neighborhood Store program in Vancouver, Washington, helps small stores sell fresh produce, to encourage people to eat healthier. One participating store owner wasn’t sure the program would work at first, but says customers are now starting to buy the fresh fruits and vegetables, and that his stock rarely spoils before it’s sold.

Now that the pilot project is over, Clark County has seven more stores lined up to participate. The program is funded by Kaiser Permanente and the Centers for Disease Control. Stores will receive tips, signs, and posters, but are in charge of purchasing and selling the foods on their own. The program is being designed so that store owners can customize the program to best fit the needs of their own customers.

Hunting Park: Healthy Corner Store Initiative Improves Local Food Options

April 23, 2012 in News, News & Events

Philadelphia Neighborhoods, April 23, 2012.

 The Food Trust in Philadelphia organizes the citywide Healthy Corner Store Initiative. Participating stores receive a $100 bonus when they join, baskets and refrigerators for displaying and storing fresh produce, and technical assistance. The Food Trust also introduces store owners to suppliers. This article profiles one store that has participated in the program for the past year. The store owner says people have been buying more produce and she “felt like it was a good investment.” Before the program started, the store carried only bananas and plantains; now it stocks a variety of other fruits and vegetables.

Editorial Response to New York Times Article on Food Deserts & Obesity

April 19, 2012 in News, News & Events

 

On April 18, 2012, The New York Times published an article raising questions about the link between food deserts and obesity. Citing two new studies (more info. here and here), the article questions the effectiveness of fighting obesity by improving access to healthy foods and challenges the idea that poor neighborhoods are often food deserts. See the full article here: Studies Question the Pairing of Food Deserts and Obesity.

Mari Gallagher’s Research and Consulting Group, which has been researching healthy food access issues for years and helped popularize the term “food desert,” issued a response to the article the same day. Gallagher argues the NYT article was misleading in many ways, including that it “fails to note the large number of studies that have identified food deserts and the subsequent large number of studies that have found a link between living in underserved areas and poor health outcomes. The article fails to note the shortcomings of the two studies it touts, even though the authors of those studies themselves go to great lengths to describe those deficiencies.”

Gallagher argues the article also misrepresents the work of healthy food advocates by giving the impression that improving access to healthy foods is the only solution being pursued: “To my knowledge, no one of any credibility has ever suggested that access was the entire solution or that anything involving the complicated relationship between diet and health is simple.”

Gallagher continues: “Our issue is not with the two new studies; we thank the authors for their valuable contributions. Our issue is the reporter’’s sloppy job of getting the facts straight. Some of this could have been settled by some simple Google searches. She muddied the water at best, misled at worst, and left the inaccurate impression that food access and the concept of food deserts does not matter.”

Read the full response here:  Response to New York Times Article on Food Deserts & Obesity.

Read another response to the NYT article, this one by Mike Curtin, CEO of D.C. Central Kitchen. “No Simple Answers for a Complex Problem,” Huffington Post, April 23, 2012. Curtin discusses his experience working to improve food access for people living in underserved neighborhoods in Washington D.C. One of D.C. Central Kitchen’s strategies is to “distribute fresh fruits and vegetables to corner stores that would not otherwise sell them for reasons of cost and capacity.”

After discussing research from D.C. about food deserts, poor people, and obesity, he goes on: “Food access is a complicated issue. It involves distribution, storage, education, employment, economics, cultural norms, and policies designed and implemented at local, state, and federal levels. While this web is as vexing as it is complex, it will not become less troublesome, tragic, or costly if we do nothing. “