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Philadelphia's First Oriental Market received Fresh Food Financing to be able to provide local shoppers fresh, healthy food. (Courtesy of David Adler/The Food Trust)

Wanted: inner-city supermarkets

A fresh idea brings healthy food to low-income neighborhoods.

By Sarah More McCann  |  Contributor for The Christian Science Monitor/ June 27, 2008 edition

Reporter Sarah More McCann reports on ways people are expanding access to fresh food.

Reporter Sarah More McCann


Grocer Jeff Brown put a lot of sweat into his ShopRite supermarket in inner-city Philadelphia: He built a pork-free meat room for Muslim customers, stocked the aisles with the Jamaican and African cuisine that neighbors requested, and taught job skills to the hires new to the workforce.

Despite skyrocketing commodity prices, Mr. Brown says the store – a venture that he never could have opened without a loan from Pennsylvania’s Fresh Food Financing Initiative – is making money.

Brown’s ShopRite is more than just a driver of urban development. It’s part of a major public-health program aimed at squashing obesity and related concerns such as heart disease and diabetes.

“There aren’t any other supermarkets within two to three miles,” he says. Without his store, the patrons “would probably eat at McDonald’s or shop at a drug store or the dollar store for food – none healthy or fresh.”

Pennsylvania’s Fresh Food Financing Initiative (FFFI) is believed to be the nation’s only statewide public-private funding initiative dedicated to opening grocery stores in underserved areas. In three years, the $120 million fund has provided “gap financing” – money beyond what a grocer normally could receive in grants and loans – to open or update 52 supermarkets statewide, creating some 4,000 jobs in the process.

From its inception, the plan has been admired by policy experts for its merging of economic and public-health innovations. But as gasoline and food prices continue to rise, the FFFI is attracting increased attention.

“What people are forced to do in some communities is travel to supermarkets in suburban locations, and the cost of gasoline has risen dramatically,” says Ken Klothen, a deputy secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development, the state arm of the partnership.

Diet was the main concern in 2002 when an employee of the Food Trust – a Philadelphia group dedicated to increasing access to healthy, affordable food – stopped state Rep. Dwight Evans on his evening walk. Public health and economic development initiatives existed in many low-income Philadelphia areas. But the ends weren’t meeting, and residents’ food shopping options were still drugstores, expensive corner shops, or fast food.

“We hadn’t had a real policy about food access that was coherent, and the big challenges are the issue of obesity, the generation of jobs, and community transformation,” Mr. Evans says.

Convinced a grocery store initiative could be an answer, Evans persuaded the governor to establish the FFFI with $10 million included in a 2005 stimulus bill, followed by another $10 million in 2006 and in 2007.

The Reinvestment Fund, a private nonprofit lender and investor in low-income communities, was tapped to manage the fund. The Food Trust and the Greater Philadelphia Urban Affairs Coalition round out the partnership.

Public-private state initiatives can be hard to manage, says Steve Goldsmith, a former mayor of Indianapolis and professor at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. Mr. Goldsmith heads a Harvard awards program for policy innovations, in which the FFFI is a finalist. “It’s often very complex, and the fact that public money was flexible and the private sector was involved looking at risk” in this dual-purpose initiative is intriguing.

Part of that flexibility required delving more deeply than conventional market analysis to assure the grocers that low-income areas could sustain a supermarket. In its own study, the Food Trust used population density figures and local spending data – rather than median household income, a more common tool – to estimate that Philadelphia’s inner-city communities hold at least $50 million of retail buying power per mile.

FFFI’s gap financing covers grocers’ operating needs. For example, Brown needed help paying for security and training – such costs for inner-city stores are much higher than those for the suburban shops that he owns. And in this case, Brown says that he can’t pass the costs on to customers. “There would be no way to do this. These are customers with very modest means,” he says.

Brown’s ShopRite opened alongside several large stores, creating 900 jobs just in that one neighborhood, he says. “Which means 900 families can buy food and get off of welfare,” Brown says. (Most of his employees live in the local community.)

Mr. Klothen notes that there’s still work to be done. For one, many of the new jobs earn enough money to feed an individual, but still not enough to support a whole family.

Nonetheless, most observers, including Klothen, agree the project is a success.

While several cities have their own supermarket programs, FFFI’s success has sparked a slew of cities and states contacting Representative Evans and plan partners about replicating the program – an idea they embrace.

“When you get going, it really works,” Klothen says. “It’s a good role for government to play – making it possible for the private sector to do what it does best and can’t do without gap financing.”

( More stories )

Comments

1. Jacqueline Schroller | 06.27.08

Marvelous plan. Is there some forum where this plan could be presented to the Governor’s of all the other states? It is going to take some real innovation and effort to help our people and get us out of some of the messes that we have created in our economy. Since this plan was well thought out and executed, why re-invent the wheel? Would love to see it proposed in many of the other states (if not all).
Thanks,
J. Schroller

2. Antonio Oftelie | 06.27.08

This is a fantastic story - and a prime example of the public/private partnerships needed to meet future challenges. The solutions to our country’s most pressing challenges don’t reside in just one sector - public, private or non-profit - they’re found when people come together and get creative on leveraging all of society’s assets.

3. Robert M. | 06.27.08

Here is an example of what can be done when the government wants to help people. If other state governments and federal agencies would cooperate with each other to create new jobs and help people in need(In this country. Remember the US in USA President Bush?), think about what could be accomplished. Real security starts here.

I hope that Ohio and other states will try something similar instead of spending ridiculous amounts of money to “attract” new businesses that the failing economy has destroyed. The bureaucrats need to get their heads out their #####.

4. Aida Medina | 06.27.08

Terrific idea. It’s time to help the consumer get their food from our own country. We need more of this type of people that really want to help their neighbors in need of saving their money use to mantain their cars running. As for myself I love fresh produce and healthy products, but it’s not easy to find them now a day, since most of these products are coming from countries that have no healthy rules in their products. Ex. FDA claimed not knowing where the tomatoes were??? I always check their country origin in order to buy them. Am fed up with the China monopoly and bad quality products. It will be nice if we get a market place like those being stablished by FFFI in every neighborhood, since it will save time, money in
gas and will be a healthy move.

5. Leyte Jefferson | 06.28.08

As someone who lives downtown in an impoverished city, I know exactly how much of a difference the presence of a supermarket can make in the health and welfare of both myself and my neighbors. I agree with the other commenters — this is something which needs to be used across the country.

6. Stephen Smith | 06.29.08

Rather than applying these small fixes on the problem of general urban blight, why not get at it from its root? Why are there no supermarkets in the ghetto? Because costs are higher. Why are costs higher? Because of crime and poor education. Why is crime so bad, and people don’t finish school? Drugs. Why are drugs so destructive? Because they’re illegal. You can try forever to whack the drug-war mole, but in the end, people are still gonna get high, and people are still gonna die.

7. Richard Trickle | 07.02.08

This project does work to fix the problem at its source. Drugs aren’t the cause of problems (even lots of wealthy people have drug problems), but instead is a symptom of the problems. If people spend more on healthy food at a grocery store, they will save money by buying ingredients directly, and by reducing health problems that could cost them and society money because of possible future medical conditions. And more jobs decreases the number of people who survive off stealing and begging, and it decreases the amount of time you can get high, thereby saving money (this is from personal experience, too). I think this is a really good idea that has much more to gain than to lose.

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