Opinion
Gross inequality in access to healthy food
4:00 PM on 08/28/2009
Access to healthy food is one of those issues that anyone - no matter their racial, ethnic, geographic or political stripes - can agree upon, simply because everyone has to eat. When most Americans think of food insecurity, they will immediately think of famine in some nameless country in the developing world. But rarely do Americans think of the food injustices happening in their own backyard.
Last week the US Department of Agriculture released a report on food deserts - areas where communities lack access to supermarkets and other outlets selling foods necessary for a healthy diet. According to the report, 2.3 million Americans live more than a mile from a supermarket and do not have access to a vehicle. While this number might seem small, this number should ring some alarms, as the report goes on to say that the "urban core areas with limited food access are characterized by higher levels of racial segregation and greater income inequality." People of color and low income communities are the ones most affected by America's food crisis, and in the current economic downturn, this is not something to turn a blind eye to.
This might be shocking to some of you, but did you know that there is no major supermarket chain in Detroit?
Even if you are "lucky" (and I do say lucky begrudgingly) to live near a supermarket, that doesn't necessarily mean the food you are getting is actually good for you. The USDA report also says that while "supermarkets and large grocery stores have lower prices than smaller stores," "easy access to all food, rather than lack of access to specific healthy foods, may be a more important factor in explaining increases in obesity." In short, the problem isn't the good food you can't get, but really the bad food you can.
I live in a moderate to low income neighborhood in Boston and I don't have a car. The nearest supermarket within walking distance of my house is a small grocer where I sometimes question why the city has yet to shut it down for public health violations. The vast majority of its products are processed, calorie-rich foods with past expiration dates on some of their packaging. The produce and meat sections look like food poisoning waiting to happen.
But at the same time, I'm single, have no children to support and a little more disposable income to work with. So, I do have the option of getting on the bus and shopping at another supermarket, farmers market, or, heck, even splurge at Whole Foods once in a while. But I worry more for the single mom of three kids down the street who is not as fortunate.
Furthermore, if you saw the movie Food, Inc., finding spoiled food on your grocer's shelves is possibly the least of your problems. There are some serious concerns about how our food is produced. Our food system is set up to treat food as a commodity rather than a universal human right. Big Food sells processed food at low prices - thanks to government subsidies - which puts local farmers out of work, provides low wages for predominately black and Latino farm and meat processing workers, and leaves a detrimental carbon footprint for future generations.
People of color and low income communities need to take back the food system, by demanding that fresh, healthy food not only be accessible to all, but that food processed respects humans, animals and the planet.
Much of this change has to start at the local level, by supporting locally grown food and educating the community about healthier food choices. Even my city is now making efforts to provide more access to farmers markets to low income residents.
Ultimately, we have to be hungry for change.
View more stories on healthy foods in urban America:
Grocery truck caters to underserved market
More veggies, less meat; flexitarians find middle ground
Where you live can affect what you weigh
Follow theGrio on Facebook & Twitter!
Top Stories
-
Recovery loses speed as consumers turn cautious
WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumers spent less, companies slowed their restocking of shelves and the nation's trade deficit dragged more on the economy in the April-to-June quarter...
more
Top Stories
-
Recovery loses speed as consumers turn cautious
WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumers spent less, companies slowed their restocking of shelves and the nation's trade deficit dragged more on the economy in the April-to-June quarter...
more
- Lenny Kravitz shocks local choir covering his song
- Cosby takes act to the web: 'I'm not hip, I'm married'
- James Earl Jones is 'Driving Miss Daisy' on Broadway
- New Orleans' own Trombone Shorty sounds off on 'supafunkrock'
- Are we ready for the redemption of Chris Brown?
- Maxwell: 'I thank people for not forgetting me'
- Obama attacks GOP over lack of economic vision
- Bank bill faces House passage, Senate delays vote
- Confirmation all but sure, Kagan ending hearings
- Attorney General Holder in Kabul to assess corruption
- Meet the new face of BP's damage control campaign
- Five of the biggest charter school myths debunked
- Randall Cunningham's son dies in hot tub accident
- Why NBA free agency is the most expensive meat market
- NCAA, colleges put ticket resellers in the game
- Bengals RB Cedric Benson arrested for bar brawl
- Venus Williams suffers stunning loss at Wimbledon
- Why the road for black cyclists remains bumpy
- From Hitsville to Neverland: A Michael Jackson landmarks journey
- The do's and don'ts of family reunions
- Slideshow: The best historically black beaches in America
- Discovering our roots in the 'African Capital of Brazil'
- Slideshow: Fall in love with the Philippines
- Sharing the sweet tastes of Milan
- Researchers: Vaccine could cure Type 1 diabetes
- Study seeks to determine when biological clocks stop
- 'Hip-hop's medicine man' keeps it healthy
- Kids to be seen and heard in obesity fight
- The sun doesn't discriminate when it comes to skin cancer
- Obama unveils national 'patient bill of rights'
- Bank bill gets patched up, moves closer to passage
- Congress votes to extend homebuyer tax credit
- Will end of 'swipe fees' be a new beginning for black consumers?
- BP oil spill leaves local black businesses in the muck
- House, Senate lawmakers finalize finance reform deal
- Survey: Hiring plans of US CEOs at 3-year high
- Slideshow: theGrio's 15 LGBT leaders of tomorrow
- Slideshow: Fans hail 'King of Pop' all around globe
- Slideshow: Can anyone seize the King of Pop's crown?
- Slideshow: Michael Jackson's most underrated songs
- Slideshow: Hip-hop's political alter egos
- Slideshow: From the Last Poets to the first 'hip-hop president'
- Over 1 million Facebook fans agree: 'I love being black'
- Giants retire uniform of legendary Monte Irvin
- 100 percent of Urban Prep's first class college-bound
- Diamondbacks' Edwin Jackson throws a no-hitter
- African miracle: Guinea holds first free election
- Jackson impersonator brings back fond memories for fans
- GOP puts Thurgood Marshall on trial at Kagan hearings
- GOP candidate compares 'tyrannical' health care bill to slavery in commercial
- Did Chris Brown shed crocodile tears for Michael Jackson?
- The evolution of Robert Byrd's racial politics
- Senate opens Kagan Supreme Court hearings
- West Virginia Sen. Robert Byrd dead at 92
- The Roots' 'How I Got Over' gets under your skin
- Mary J: What's the 411 on women in hip-hop?
- Fans of original 'Karate Kid' will get a kick out of remake
- Obama: I would have fired BP chief by now
- Janelle MonĂ¡e's moment in the spotlight is worth the wait
- From farm girl to 'Foxy Brown': Pam Grier tells all
- 50 Va inmates in segregation over grooming policy
- Calif NAACP to back pot legalization initiative
- Report: Henry Louis Gates Jr's arrest avoidable
- Congo celebrates 50th anniversary as its people struggle to survive
- Senators willing to scale back their energy bill
- Jesse Jackson Jr. a pawn in Blagojevich's schemes
- TheGrio Reflects: Malcolm X rails against complacent civil rights activists
- TheGrio Reflects: Aretha Franklin, the Queen of Soul
- TheGrio Reflects: Muhammad Ali on Vietnam
- theGrio Reflects: The Story Of Emmett Till
- theGrio Reflects: the Underground Railroad
- theGrio Reflects: The 14th Amendment is adopted
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Myspace
Flickr
Podcast
Wordpress
Linkedin
Last.fm
Tumblr
Identi.ca
Plurk