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Licensing & Zoning: Tools for Public Health

July 23, 2012 in Resources, Tools

ChangeLab Solutions, 2012.

Learn how licensing and zoning laws can help promote public health and how to choose the best strategy to meet the goals for your community. Also, learn the difference between licensing and zoning laws. This guide explains how regulations can be shaped to accomplish goals such as limiting the location or density of tobacco retailers or liquor stores, creating “healthy food zones” near schools, increasing the availability of healthy foods, and requiring acceptance of federal food assistance. Many of the licensing and zoning tools described might be helpful for people working on healthy corner store projects.

Download the full pdf here: Licensing & Zoning-Tools for Public Health.


Putting Business to Work for Health: Incentive Policies for the Private Sector

June 20, 2012 in Reports, Resources

Change Lab Solutions (formerly Public Health Law & Policy), 2012.

“Every day, business owners and real estate developers make decisions that have tremendous impact on our health – where homes are built, where businesses are located, and what kinds of products and services are available. Local government incentives can motivate them to make choices that promote public health.

Developed by ChangeLab Solutions, formerly Public Health Law & Policy (PHLP), this guide looks at how local government incentives can help improve community health. It explains a variety of different types of incentives that promote access to healthy food and physical activity space, and outlines the steps involved in developing and carrying out these policies and programs.”

The report includes a section titled “Expanding Access to Healthy Food Through Incentives,” likely to be useful for those working on healthy corner store projects. Incentives described include tax relief, grants, zoning incentives, waivers, density bonuses, and more.

Download the pdf here.

Healthy Urban Food Enterprise Development Center

June 20, 2012 in Resources, Tools

Wallace Center at Winrock International.

The Healthy Urban Food Enterprise Development Center has many resources for people working on healthy food access projects. The Center provides grants and technical assistance to “support enterprise development and business-based approaches to getting more healthy food into communities with limited access.” It focuses on solutions that create jobs, provide economic incentives to farmers, and that can become self-sustaining. The Center–an outcome of the 2008 Farm Bill–is funded by the USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture, and supports 30 awards totaling over $885,000. The Center’s website includes information about its grantees.

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.

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.

Asian Shopkeepers And The Economics Of Improving Corner Stores

April 10, 2012 in News, News & Events

DCentric, April 10, 2012.

Newly-elected Washington D.C. councilman Marion Barry recently criticized Asian-owned corner stores in D.C., saying the shops are “dirty.” Later he said they should sell healthier products and improve their stores. The councilman is being criticized for the negative remarks he made about Asian store owners, and the incident has people talking about the sometimes tense relationship between the Asian and black communities in D.C.

This article describes some of the challenges small stores face in selling healthier products, and includes an interview with an Asian store owner who participates in DC Central Kitchen’s Healthy Corners Program. The program–funded with a $300,000 grant from the city–includes the launch of an affordable wholesale delivery service that store owners can use to order healthy foods. The store owner interviewed in the article points out that not all Asian store owners have bad relationships with their customers, and suggests that communication can be difficult not only for “Asian retailers, but pretty much all immigrants in the community…The immigrants have the same issue where there’s a language barrier, and also the cultural differences they haven’t quite grasped. It’s just a process they go through. I don’t know how to close that gap real quickly.” He also suggests that customers ask their local store to carry healthier options or specific products they are interested in.

Healthy Corner Store Conversion Request for Proposals

March 28, 2012 in News

Working on a corner store project in California? Need financing? Check out this opportunity:

“The California FreshWorks Fund (FreshWorks) announces the availability of $1 million in capital to support healthy corner store conversion programs throughout the state of California.

FreshWorks will award up to ten $100,000 capital investments to qualified intermediaries that work with store owners to implement conversion activities that promote the sale of healthy foods including fresh produce and diary, low-sugar drinks and healthy snacks. The capital investments will take the form of low-interest loans, with partial forgiveness of loan principal available based on performance.”

The due date for applications is May 7, 2012.

Awards will be announced July 9, 2012.

For more information and to fill out an application, go here.

Can neighborhood corner stores improve public health?

March 20, 2012 in News

By Staff of GermantownBeat, March 20, 2012.

The Philadelphia Healthy Corner Store Initiative, started by the Food Trust, now has more than 600 participating stores.  That number is set to expand to 1,000, with the help of a $15 million federal grant. The program is recruiting store owners by convincing them that it is possible to make money on healthy food, since “the profit margins are typically 20 to 40 percent, which is much higher than that on chips and soda.” Stores are required to start stocking several different kind of healthy food to participate in the program and to market the products using materials provided by the Food Trust. They are then eligible to apply for small grants to help them buy equipment for storing healthier items.

 

 

Another Corner Market In East Los Angeles Transformed

February 16, 2012 in News

February 16, 2012. Eastern Group Publications, Inc.

“I like the way this is set up. I like the convenience. When you see pretty fruits and vegetables you just want to come,” — Diana Razo, 50, a long time East Los Angeles resident who lives across the street from the newly transformed market. The Ramirez Meat Market is the second corner store to be renovated to offer healthier foods, with the help of UCLA and USC researchers and community members. This project was funded by the National Institutes of Health.