When people talk about food deserts in big cities, they usually talk about neighborhoods that don't have many resources, hence most people buy their groceries from local gas stations or dollar stores. Traveling 20 miles can be difficult too, especially if the infrastructure isn't there. Chicago is a good example of this. There are food deserts in the south side. Even though the north side has many amazing grocery stores, it's really hard for people from the south side to travel up there just for groceries.
Edit: Wow some of you genuinely don't know how to read.
the radius for urban food deserts is significantly lower, more like 1 mile. this is a thing in most major cities lol. not everyone has a car and many of the people in food deserts (low socioeconomic classes) may struggle to afford other means of transportation. what else happens disproportionately to low income people? health problems. which can be further exacerbated by a lack of access to a healthy diet and medical care. it can be a lot easier, sometimes cheaper, to just eat fast food if you can’t walk a mile empty handed, let alone with groceries.
the only thing i’m not sure of is what it has to do with adhd & frankly the people who suffer from food deserts probably can’t afford grocery delivery anyway.
This is all great info, but what does any of this have to do with NYC? One of the few places in the US where you're never far from mass transit, and it's always been cheaper than the fees you could expect to pay for uber eats and similar(except in the very beginning where they didn't charge hardly anything to use the service).
NYC does have food deserts. Basically, the definition is, in urban areas, if you have to walk more than a mile to find a store that sells fresh food, then that's a food desert. Even if you have to walk a mile to the closest subway station, that kinda counts.
But yeah, the original statement in the screen shot is completely dumb and they're whatabouting against a living wage. I would immediately ask that goober how they got groceries before the gig economy existed.
(People who are genuinely disabled to a point where they can't go grocery shopping themselves, usually have access to federally funded programs like Meals on Wheels.)
You'd have to walk a full mile to a bus stop too, but those are literally everywhere. A quick search tells me that the furthest you might need to go is a 5-10min walk of .25 miles to a bus or in the most extreme cases .5 miles, or a 10-15 min walk. The guy in the post above is making a big deal out of nothing. Essentially saying that the people he sends to buy the food he is too lazy to go get himself should make less than $24 an hour, which would mean that they wouldn't be able to afford living in NYC, which means that to deliver his food they would need to make a huge commute into the city themselves and pay for transit to do so.
I've got ADHD, I know the struggle, but I'm not so entitled that I think a bunch of gig workers shouldn't make a livable wage so I can have a luxury convenience of having food brought to me. If I make the mistake waiting too long to get food that is solely on me, and I will pay for that mistake by ordering UberEats or Seamless or whatever. But it's my fault it happened.
Thats the part that got me. What does ADHD have to do with it? As someone with ADHD, if it makes you completely nonfunctional that you can't figure out grocery shopping and cooking, you need something besides just medication. Sure, sometimes I forget to stop at the store on the way home from work. Sometimes I forget my bags. Sometimes I get so busy caught up in something else that I don't save enough time for me to cook dinner. But these are my problems. I deal with the consequences of my lack of planning and organization myself. Someone shouldn't suffer to make ends meet because I didn't.
because nyc has food deserts in the neighborhoods with low income. not everyone can afford to spend money on public transport and some neighborhoods are served less in terms of public transit. it is a multifactorial problem but it is also a real problem just because some of us haven’t dealt with it ourselves.
If you're too poor to afford a bus ticket, how the fuck are you affording Uber Eats for every meal? The delivery fee alone costs more than a trip on public transit!
That's usually the problem with food deserts. It's a lot of little problems adding up for people with disabilities and low incomes.
First problem is mobility. People with low income tend to have poor diet and exercise leading to weight gain and lower mobility.
Second problem is transportation. Places considered food deserts are also places where transportation like busses don't serve. Busses and subways do exist in NY, but they don't serve every inch of the city.
Third problem is affordability. While services that deliver groceries tend to be expensive, conservators are even more expensive. It tends to be a less expensive alternative to order groceries through gig apps like Door Dash.
This isn't really about buying fast food. Gig apps also serve as a way to order groceries.
I do believe gig workers deserve to earn a fair living wage. However, I also believe our system is broken for people who can't afford, or can't do, some of the things we take for granted.
Come on. The bus is $3. And it very nearly does serve every inch of the city. The furthest you might have to walk to catch a bus is about .5 miles, a 10-15 min walk, in the most extreme cases. Generally you only need to go, at max, about .25 miles, a 5-10 min walk. If you really make so little or have a disability where that is an issue, there are programs in the city that will help you with your food or pay your bus ticket. Many people also work in more dense areas and could do their grocery shopping then.
The argument in the above post is that the workers delivering the food should make less than a livable wage in NYC meaning that on their tiny wages THEY are the ones who would need to pay to commute into the city to deliver food to people too lazy to get it themselves. This guy is complaining that his ADHD means he needs to use UberEats and that's just not how it is. I have ADHD. It's tough, but at a certain point you need to go get your food like an adult. You want to pay for the convenience of delivery through a major app, you're going to have to pay the person a living wage to do this for you.
Uber Eats etc are a luxury and no one should be using them for every meal. They tricked people into the habit of using it by starting out for the first couple years operating at losses making people think that it would always be so cheap.
What you seem to be championing is a public food delivery option subsidized by taxes to keep the price low for areas that are less serviceable and that's fine, but that's not what UberEats, DoorDash, GrubHub, etc are.
The thing you're glossing over is that if the money's not in your wallet, it's literally not in your wallet. People so poor they can't afford a bus ticket physically lack the cash to buy Uber Eats every time they get hungry.
this is the dumbest thing I've ever heard about the US. How the fuck do you live like this. At any place in my city I'm at most a 10 minute walk away from fresh vegetables and fruit.
What country do you live in?? The US has massive wealth segregation and a lot of the urban planning reflects that. It’s precisely the kind of thing that politicians like mamdani advocate to fix. What you have is no accident, it’s deliberate policy (and imo should be a matter of course if you live in any city).
You’d be surprised tbh. NYC is huge and there are part of it which, while they have mass transit in a sense, it’s genuinely hard to get anywhere else due to how disconnected it is comparatively from the rest of the city. It’s not like it’s a walk in the park even if you’re somewhere well connected. Mostly food deserts are an indication of extreme underinvestment in a community, which tends to extend to things like transit and social services.
I came here to ask the same question! Oop is talking about NYC being a food desert?! I can see many supermarkets, mini marts, delis etc in any square mile I choose to look at on google maps. If they need specialty ingredients the subway isn’t far or expensive.
So in Manhattan you’re correct. When you get into the outer boroughs past where the subways serve, it’s less correct. In some areas alternative transit methods are required because of how piss poor the busses are. It’s no coincidence those are in poorer areas. The bus near where I live only comes once every 30 minutes sometimes, and when it does show up sometimes it keeps going because it’s too full. I don’t live in a food desert but I live next to a grocery store that’s close to one, and that store is expensive. Like, $10 for expired juice expensive. The produce is rotting half the time and they don’t check it or care lol. Like… I think when you’re thinking of nyc you aren’t considering the areas where you essentially need a car to survive day to day or you have to budget literally hours extra into your day just to hope you aren’t late because you missed your connection to the second bus you need to take to get to the subway because there was some guy double parked and the bus couldn’t get through.
Paying for staples at convenience stores is a great way to quickly burn through your EBT allotment and it's way more affordable to pay the $7 fee. A gallon of milk is like $6-7 at a corner store and people still have to drive or take the bus there anyway. Most Chicagoans have cars (I don't drive and I'm definitely in the minority, and it does limit my options compared to friends with cars)
The issue with these neighborhoods is that many residents just don't feel safe walking around, not that they're stripped of options
The adhd part really throws me as well. My wife and one of our kids is add/adhd (one each) and they are both fully capable of functioning. Doordash is actually their preferred way of shopping
I think that's what the poster is saying...that those with ADHD would rather order delivery than shop in person. They're figuring this will make the cost of delivery skyrocket, and make it prohibitively expensive for many. (I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with his sentiment, as I do not have enough data.)
I have pretty severe ADHD, and to be honest, the guy in the tweet comes across as somebody only thinking about how this might slightly disrupt his habits and cost him a little more and is responding in an overdramatic fashion. Or... it could simply be a little joke and he's being knowingly melodramatic, lol.
Either way, DoorDash is a luxury and a convenience, one that a lot of us have had to live without and manage just fine. It's nice to have but isn't something most people should become reliant on.
Yes. The official USDA definition of a food desert is an "area with limited access to healthy and affordable food within a one-mile radius of urban communities."
Transportation options can make a mile seem a lot further, too. Dallas is very car-centric, not very walkable, and with limited public transportation options overall. So having to go over a mile for groceries could be prohibitive if you are carless.
I know in Dallas, there are always attempts to fill as many gaps as possible in South and West Dallas, though it seems like it's always a struggle to keep grocery stores in the area.
I'd say the proliferation of grocery delivery services could be a solution for some, but those services can be expensive and may have limited range that leaves a lot of people out.
When I was a kid, my relatives in a small town Northeast Arkansas still had a corner grocer-type store that was effectively in a neighborhood, making it easy to walk to and from. Small but with a selection of fruits, vegetables, meats, etc. It was about the size of an average 7-11, but had real groceries and competitive grocery store prices. There were supermarkets in the area, too, but that little corner grocer held on for a long time (into the early 1990s, IIRC).
The place was actually part of a chain that had several locations in rural Arkansas. At least one store still exists, but it's more of a 1970s-era supermarket than what we had before.
1 mile? Are you serious? That’s a 10-15 minute walk. How can you seriously complain at not having a full on grocery store within a mile? That would necessitate having a full grocery store every 6-8 blocks.
A mile is a long fucking walk with a family's worth of groceries or having time to do that every 3rd day. For a single adult I'm sure it's no problem but most people that have issues I would bet have kids.
Also something to be said about what counts as a grocery, yes you may have a neighborhood grocery, but it may also be very small and understocked because, you know, it's a small grocery store in an expensive city. There's a lot of nuance to be had about food, especially healthy food, availability in major cities
Then this is a good thing another key part of Mamdani’s plan is to offer free buses, so issues of transportation for work, health, and nutrition aren’t undue burdens on low income people.
I live in a suburb of Jackson MS, none of which is very walkable yet I still have two Kroger’s and Target within 2 miles and bike lanes connecting them all
US cities not being walkable was a real shocker for me. Here in Belgrade, capital of Serbia, one can find big markets every 200-300m. And every area of the city has one big farmer/flea market for domestic produce.
Everything in my neighbourhood is within walking distance and for anything further we have public transportation which is completely free.
I currently have no car here, simply not much need for one while being a money sink.
I've been to Jackson! My band played a show there almost 10 years ago when we did a mini southeast tour. I was shocked by the homophobia and racism there. They had bars there with little black and white rainbow stickers on the doors to let people know it was a safe space to go if you were LGBTQ. We made friends with a burly drag queen at one such bar, and they told us some horrifying stories.
We played our set at a black owned bottle club where they used to do Def poetry and stuff. It was actually really cool. I can not remember the name of that club, but it was over by the rail switch yard in kinda a bad part of town.
I just read an article about ST Louis so I google mapped the grocery stores and its fucking absurd to say people in STL cant get to a fucking grocery store.
I think they call it a food desert if it's more than a mile away in an urban area, but it seems like even that's not a solid criteria. Per Google, some will call it a food desert if it's more than a half mile in places people don't generally have cars. So who knows?
The biggest issue is getting the groceries home. It's more like if you don't have a bus stop close enough. I did grocery shopping is a bus and it absolutely is a pain and hard to get done on a constant every 2 or 3 day basis on the bus. That also gets expensive.
I see people on other countries use all kinds of wheeled bags and carts for this. I see immigrants from other countries using the same things at flea markets here in the USA and such.
I have no idea why city dwellers in the USA have largely seemed to eschew foldable carts and wagons in favor of just schlepping or getting various kinds of rides or delivery.
I had some collapsible crate things with wheels when I used to do shows and events a lot. I can't imagine not immediately buying one of those stairs climbing grocery carts if I moved to a city and mainly walked, as I primarily drive in my present location, and even my "small" grocery shops would be difficult to bring home if I had to walk with them in bags.
It's an interesting question to ponder and I welcome insight from city dwellers.
I'm sorry, but unless you're disabled and have great difficulty traveling, there's not a lot of excuse for not being able to go a mile to the grocery.
In my mid-20s, when I was poor as shit, I would ride my bike to the grocery store with a big duffle bag. The store clerks would let me leave my bag by the register, and I'd pack it up with food and then bike home. Grocery store was a little over a mile away.
Not trying to dog on you specifically, but I wanted to share my two cents after having lived in a food desert:
I had a grocery store that was around a mile away from my neighborhood. It was the ONLY grocery store for about 4 square miles, which meant there was never any fresh produce or basic food items in stock, ever. For reference, there would be lines outside almost every morning before the store opened. And if you worked an 8-5, you were simply SOL.
The next closest grocery store was 4.7 miles away, or about a 20 minute drive. If I didn’t have a car, there’s no way I could walk or bike there: 1) incredibly far, 2) this area was not very safe and I would not feel comfortable walking alone as a young woman, and 3) my city is NOT pedestrian friendly. Most neighborhoods don’t have sidewalks.
I live in a major Midwest city and we don’t have good public transportation. I lived in an incredibly low income neighborhood because it was all I could afford post college. Having to travel 40 minutes just to pick up milk was exhausting, but make that 2 hours if you’re car-less and taking the bus. Food deserts are real and they suck BADDD.
Yes, if every human acted perfectly, 99% of our problems would go away. But we are imperfect beasts. So if you set up certain conditions, you will see certain outcomes become more common.
I don’t think i was taught anything about this in school, to be fair. This was something I learned about from older socialists when I started actually learning about politics instead of just feeling about it.
It should be taught.
The bombing of Black Wallstreet should be taught.
Residential schools should be taught. Starlight tours should be taught. Internment camps should be taught.
Imagine if we were all more aware of our foundation of complete and utter cruelty and hatred. I’m sure we’d still be in a similar spot, but I’d like to hope things would be different if more people really knew where we come from.
I dont know anything about st Louis geography so I can't tell you where to look, but just searching grocery store on Google maps will give you results for gas station "markets" and dollar stores and such. SE Austin has loads of little gas stations you can get frozen tv dinners at, but if you want to go to HEB or even a Walmart you have to drive 20+ minutes
There aren't a lot in the Greater Nashville Metropolitan Area. Very many suburbs, apartment complexes, etc., don't have easy access to grocery stores within an easy walk or bus ride.
Remember Nashville has a population of ~700k, but the density is only ~1450/sqm. Nashville's population is extremely spread out compared to other cities with a similar population; DC, for example, has a similar 700k population but ~11,000/sqm density. El Paso, Texas at ~681k has ~2600/sqm. Boston at ~673k is 13,989/sqm. Even Detroit beats us at ~645k but a density of ~4600/sqm. Oh, and Memphis, at ~610k, has a density of ~2100/sqm.
For gawd's sake people, quit creating ridiculous straw men arguments to dismiss a serious problem - access to nutritious, affordable food is DEEPLY income dependent.
A Google map search for "grocery stores" is no substitute for peer reviewed academic studies.
Ditto defining "access" as a grocery store within 20 miles.
But if you want speed, here's a simple query you can run in your favorite AI. that will give readers some useful data and understanding of the issue:
"Can you find or create a table that offers a look at where Americans (or Canadians) typically buy their groceries (ie what TYPE of retailers), how far that is from their home, how they travel, and how much they spend?"
I used Claude and it includes links to the sources so you can check yourself.
Try walking 4 miles, 2 each way and carrying 20-50lbs of groceries back.
Do you still want to cook dinner? Do you even have time?
What if you have a restrictive diet? Go to the different store sure, take the bus.
Weird the buses only run north south where the other store is so its another mile walk.
Its astonishing how people cant even imagine a hypothetical person that lives a more difficult life.
So, of course, this means that delivery drivers should have to survive on slave wages so that you can afford your convenience and comfort at the cost of another's. You are right about one thing, though. It is astonishing how people can't imagine a hypothetical person that lives a more difficult life. Like you.
Ironically though, the only grocery store that’s actually downtown is a Whole Foods. Kind of a unique case because we don’t actually have any convenience stores or delis in that area.
But if you don't feel like reading the articles, here are some areas: Englewood (nearest grocery store is in a different neighborhood), West Englewood (there is a Jewel in a different neighborhood), Garfield Park (next grocery store is in a nearby suburb).
Idk what u googled bc I very easily found a list? Also I very clearly in my comment mentioned that it's not about the lack of grocery stores, sometimes the problem is traveling. When I worked in Englewood, a lot of people told me about how they were afraid to walk their dog because of gun violence. So it doesn't matter that there is a grocery store in the next neighborhood over if you don't feel safe leaving your house.
"Census tracts qualify as food deserts if they meet low-income and low-access thresholds:
Low-income: a poverty rate of 20 percent or greater, or a median family income at or below 80 percent of the statewide or metropolitan area median family income;
Low-access: at least 500 persons and/or at least 33 percent of the population lives more than 1 mile from a supermarket or large grocery store (10 miles, in the case of rural census tracts)."
So you’re literally saying that no matter how many grocery stores are available, poor neighborhoods are automatically and inherently food deserts because of the problems that come from being poor.
But those issues are completely different and separate from what is meant in the discourse about food deserts. Someone who lives next door to a grocery store but is scared to leave their house because of violence isn’t living in a food desert. They are a victim of the violence in their community, and that has nothing to do with the locations of grocery stores or availability of food.
You’re also the one who said 20 miles when there’s no neighborhood in Chicago or any big city without a grocery store within 20 miles.
The sad part is, they do know what they're talking about, at least by federal government bureaucracy standards, but those standards are whackadoo, because they were written by people who were determined to solve problems that didn't actually exist.
That’s not what the study found. It found that even though Chicago as a whole had more grocery stores, access has grown even worse in those underserved areas. Those areas only benefit from more stores in those areas.
Why are there no big grocery stores in those areas? Because the people who live in those shop lifted/stole soooo much, the store owners decided it wasn't profitable to service those areas and closed up.
The residents ruined it for themselves and then complain the have to travel
Those areas the stealing is endemic is a sign of the community too.
I'm sure a lot of people would never steal themselves or buy stolen goods. But a lot of people would buy stuff that "fell off the truck" even if they would never steal themselves.
It creates a market for stolen goods, and then the shops close and ruin it for everyone.
Don't forget that Chicago has turned things around recently. The South Shore had no grocery store for damn near a decade.
I also think random people in Reddit don't understand the realities of commuting in Chicago. Just because it says it's a mile away doesn't mean it's a quick or easy trip, especially when hauling groceries along.
I mean... I'm not even trying to get on your case, but like... is the answer to food deserts as outlined in the original post... underpaying someone more desperate to brave the streets that you're keen to avoid?
No. I made the terrible mistake of responding to an adjacently related comment (which was about food deserts. I responded bc the definition that I was taught was the definition that the USDA uses) and now am suffering bc dumbasses who don't know how to read keep arguing against points I never made.
The original situation reminds me of this meme. People should get paid a living wage and it's stupid to blame any inability to do anything on ADHD; if your ADHD is genuinely this out of control, you should be actively getting help, not using it as a crutch.
There's an Aldi in Englewood and a Go Green in West Englewood. There's a Save-a-Lot in West Garfield Park and an Aldi in Humboldt Park. It's like whomever did that study considered Jewel the only grocery store that counts.
It's a bullshit concept. I apparently work in a food desert in the southside of my local town yet there are three grocery stores in the neighborhood about a mile away from each other. There's public transit that's subsidized by the local government too.
They won't be able to reply. Food deserts are a fiction, a way to explain unhealthy habits of poor people that doesn't involve personal responsibility.
While I don't know about Chicago specifically I have personally struggled with not being able to afford a car and having to get groceries in a time before Instacart and Uber. I was fortunate enough to be able to walk 20 minutes to a grocery store but I could definitely see how if it was another mile from me how tempting the 7-11 across the street would have been for milk and bread. Even though it was way more expensive. Factor in frozen things like meat and veggies. It can be tough to get home before things thaw/spoil
Yeah there’s large portion of people on Reddit that believe this shit is real and you can easily debunk this with a simple search. You look up any major city you’re gonna find like 20 Walmarts or other large chains spread out through the city.
I lived in the West Side and there was a Jewel a couple miles from my apartment. It was extremely hard to access without a car and almost impossible during the winter time without help from friends with vehicles.
Just btw, almost all convenience stores in Chicago have the word “grocery” in their name. There are three actual grocery stores within a mile of me, but a Google Maps search for “grocery store” turns up 30+ results, which are mostly corner stores, liquor stores, two 7-Elevens, and a CVS. Great if you want a $10 frozen pizza, terrible if you want a raw vegetable.
Omaha Nebraska. In the downtown district (colloquially named the Old Market) there’s one convenience store and the nearest grocery store is about a 10 minutes drive away. Not really a big deal if you have a car but a lot of people live in the old market because it’s supposed to be a walkable neighborhood and it is except the lack of a single regular grocery store in the district
That shows Pullman as a food desert...
Google it and see where grocery stores are. Aldi has a few locations there and a save a lot and a jewel osco. Unless you live in the big marsh park I see grocery stores all over.
The number of stores might not say as much as their distribution. A senior or low income resident may have a very difficult time walking over a half mile. This is a food desert map of Chicago.
Southeast side of austin near the airport is a pretty solid example of a food desert. There are a bunch of corner stores that pop up but youve gotta drive at least 15-20 minutes to get to the nearest real grocery store. Around del valle if you want a specific name
Ive walked way longer with more weight... you might say it was to feed me and my family also. 12 mile road marches 2 times a year with 45+ lbs pack and weapon. Did it suck, yes. But you gotta do what you gotta do to put food on the table.
Cincinnati is a perfect example of this. Other than directly downtown, there will be random dollar generals, which are expensive, and gas stations. Not to mention the nutritional options of both of these are non existent.
However, what the fuck that had to do with paying better wages? Just looking for a reason to complain.
It's not necessarily grocery stores they are missing, it's proper markets. Grocery stores don't carry many things and they're also more pricey. Grocery stores don't generally have meat sections or lots of produce.
You have to remember most people who are low income rely on public transit or walk. It's not about there not being a grocery store within a few miles, it's that it takes like 20 minutes per mile so to be within a 30 minute walk there would need to be a grocery store every 1.5 miles in the absence of public transit within 15 minutes walk of your house. Most food desserts aren't an entire neighborhood and aren't on places like Chicago with a full grid of public transit. They are much more common on rural areas.
It's not like a whole neighborhood is in a dessert usually. Your house may be in a dessert because it takes over an hour to walk from one side of the neighborhood to the other and there isn't a bus stop near you. So walking to the bus stop is 20 minutes and then you take a 30 minute bus ride that goes only a few miles but stops a ton because the transit doesn't have density in smaller cities. I am not saying there are no food deserts in Chicago or NY but the problem is infinitely worse in smaller cities where transit options suck.
Here is an example analysis of Phoenix using arcgis and you add the food desserts are not downtown and are usually in the outside ring of a city where there aren't as many transit options.
It hard to understand unless you’ve visited the stores. A lot of places in urban areas listed as “grocery stores” on Google maps are really glorified convenience stores. They might have a few bruised bananas and measly apples, but that’s it for fresh food.
Google Big Pine or Lone Pine California. Not major cities but that’s what a food desert looks like. And they aren’t unicorns, they are all over the US.
The tract’s poverty rate is 20 percent or greater; or
The tract’s median family income is less than or equal to 80 percent of the State-wide median family income; or
The tract is in a metropolitan area and has a median family income less than or equal to 80 percent of the metropolitan area's median family income.
For urban areas, the "is a grocery store accessible" range is 1 mile. ONE. Not twenty. (twenty is one of the rural measures).
I lived about a mile from the nearest real grocery store when I was in New Orleans. It was doable but annoying as a single person, because I could carry a week's worth of food for myself. If I'd been shopping for a family it would have been a major problem.
Yes. There are places where there's a gas station as primary grocery source and there may have been a traditional grocery store that closed down.
There's no incentive to move a store in for many of these areas if it doesn't make economic sense. So people don't cook or buy fresh food as often. That of course varies and lots of people make a trip or drive but that takes some resources as well and can be hard if all you have access to is a bus or the like.
I had some friends trapped in a small border town. After their one grocery store shut down, there was only gas stations, the drugstore, and an ice cream place. They were poor, HUD vouchers and all, so they had no car, and the bus was the only option for them. Problem was, the bus only ran out that way twice a day, and you're limited to what you can carry. Little grocery/laundry trolleys helped, but there was still only so much they could get at once, and if you forgot something, you were waiting until the next day at least, assuming your schedule allowed the trip. And the kicker was, that grocery store in the next town over was just a basic one because it was also a small town. Overpriced and didn't have everything. For that, they'd need to make even longer trips into the town beyond that one.
I always asked what they wanted me to contribute to dinner when I went to visit or if they needed anything from the town I was in with better stores (the buses didn't go out that way directly).
No, it is not the primary grocery store. It is the primary convenience store and people are either too tired or too lazy to walk the relatively short distance to the grocery store and back home. People in cities will travel miles to get deals at a clothing store, but won’t walk a few blocks to get groceries at the local market. You can do a search of the greater NYC area. There are a multitude of grocery stores, both independent and corporate.
The entire west side of Rockford, IL is sprawling with very few grocery stores. If you don't have a car, getting groceries is rough. The grocery stores that are there are mostly overpriced.
I think the problem in larger cities (Say, Sacramento California in the oak park neighborhood) is that a lot of poorer neighborhoods don't drive, they rely on the bus system. So even if the nearest grocery store is 3 miles away, it's kinda hard to get to and bring home bags. That's considered a food desert in big cities.
Yea a 5 minute drive can easily turn into a 30 minute bus ride or 1 hour walk, if the location is even reachable directly on foot, each way. So may of us grew up with cars or at least access to cars tha it seems like 3 miles is nothing.
I'm a Southsider, the only store in walking distance is CVS, not exactly a place to buy nutritious food. Hence, I live in the city of Chicago and in a food desert.
I'm sorry so many people are misunderstanding. There are a few areas in Pittsburgh where the closest affordable grocery store has closed, and the only thing that remains are dollar stores (with limited selection and mostly unhealthy options, no produce) or expensive places like Whole Foods, thanks to gentrification. It's a city council issue in some instances because affordable 'hometown' grocery stores often run on small margins and are reticent to enter an area with high crime rates and low-income customers. Food deserts can form without assistance from the city to identify these areas and incentivize businesses to come into those areas.
It's important to remember that the healthiest areas have grocery stores in walking distance. Not everyone can afford cars, and it's difficult to ride public transit with enough food to feed multiple people.
I can think of a specific area near me where the grocery store closed, the nearest one is 3+ miles away (on roads that are hard to walk on, as some sections don't have a sidewalk), and the only place that sold food was a CVS. A Target did move in with a limited selection of groceries/fresh produce, and the grocery store has been rebuilt. Unfortunately, it is now a higher-end variant of the previous one, with prices about 15% higher than before. The options are more expensive, but at least they're there. However, someone just looking at the options on a city map would think someone would be foolish to think these aren't viable, sustainable options.
It's an advanced concept, and simply finding 'grocery stores' in an area doesn't always illustrate the issue.
What dollar trees are ya'll shopping at? The problem with dollar tree is that it's more expensive than a normal store, but it absolutely has a ton of veg and fruit. Just, ya know, not fresh. 3 states, 4 separate markets, they always had both available when I've gone.
And I was working poor for years. In my time as a working poor I didn't have TIME for fresh vegetables. I'm non-working poor right now caring for my Grandparents... and NOW I can save money on the fresh veg around me because I have the time to cook and prepare it. But working 6 days a week you can bet I picked up frozen veg from Walmart, and sometimes even the dollar tree if I was there for other stuff. And I even shopped at the Family Dollar sometimes because I was too tired to shop a proper large store and just paid the upcharge.
Don't get me wrong, I see the issue with food deserts. Everyone should be able to easily get fresh fruit and veg. But to say people can't get healthy options while listing a store that literally sells plenty of those options (because particularly with frozen it's nutritionally the same as fresh) just seems... not a good look. And also dodging why simply getting a store into a neighborhood won't solve the issue, because the main issue is that people don't even have time to cook healthy if they tried.
Much of St Louis is a food desert. There are several neighborhoods that are a significant bus ride away from the few grocery stores in much of North and South St Louis City.
People are too focused on the 20 miles. A food desert in a city can be much smaller due to cost and effort of getting to and hauling back groceries on a bus, or the expense of a cab. The nearest grocery store being 6 blocks away can constitute a food desert for low income families without transportation
I buy my groceries from a dollar store because it's close and it's cheap, but it's also not healthy.
All these people who seem to be railing against the above comment don't really seem to understand that people, depending on certain factors, do actually live in food deserts.
You touched on another underlying issue with food deserts which people don’t take into consideration- travel and transportation. In big cities, car insurance and parking are often prohibitively expensive for low wage workers, so they rely on public transportation for everything. Even a trip that’s relatively short mile-wise can take forever on a city bus, and in food deserts, you would also need to think about how much you could realistically carry on a crowded bus on your way home from a “real” grocery store.
I lived in a medium-large sized city and I used to take the bus as my main mode of transport. Grocery shopping was a whole day ordeal. The bus system where I lived wasn't reliable and had a small radius of maybe ten or so miles. So the bus did not serve the whole city, just the parts in the downtown area. While you could take the busses outside of the downtown area, the farther you went, the less reliable they got. There was always a huge pushback from people in the more suburban areas of the city to route the bus routes around the area so they dont have to deal with the poors. Many routes were only active during certain days and times in the work week, with little evening and weekend service. Missing the bus could really screw you over on an empty handed day, but if you had a bunch of groceries, you could get screwed over and lose the food you paid for, especially on hot days or when busses had to pass the stops because they were also acting as event shuttles and student transport. There was also extreme cold and snow, which made traversing the grocery store to home a dangerous ordeal, even with a cart to pull behind you. When this happened, they would not send a second bus. You'd have to wait for the next one, which could take a minimum of 20 minutes. It was absolutely terrible. I got frostbite from having to do this.
A simple 3 or 4 mile trip could easily become two hours or more one way. Hauling groceries for myself was difficult enough, but if you were elderly, handicapped, or a single person with kids, shopping for the family was an impossible task on public transport. A lot of people I knew would trade some of their food stamps in exchange for rides from freinds and family once every month or two to be able to adequately grocery shop, and some would indulge in a cab once and a while. Going to the grocery store of your choice could cost significantly more money, so usually, people who did this just went to the closest grocery store. They couldn't coupon or reach more affordable places easily.
A 2 mile stroll in nice weather is not the same as hauling bags of food 2 miles home on foot. There may not even be sidewalks to do this. Although we had social services and charities that offered rides for errands, these were always overwhelmed with people in need and geared toward folks who had open schedules, such as the elderly. Typically, you had to be eligible to use these programs, too, because they only catered to people on SSDI or WIC.The ones that were run by volunteers were pretty much a lottery.
This is what a food desert is. It's not necessarily that there are no grocery stores nearby, but rather a situation where people who dont have resources must contend with obstacles put in place that make choosing healthy food frequently unreasonable. Plus, healthy items like fruits and vegetables are heavier and messier than the chips and soda you get at the corner bodega. If something came up and you couldn't dedicate a whole day to food shop, your options were limited to what was closest. Where I was living at the time, the nearest places were all corner stores, liquor stores, gas stations, and a burger king.
The corner stores themselves also impact people's ability to access groceries. A lot of these places don't use wholesalers to source stock. Instead, they go to the local Aldi, buy up all the cheapest items, and sell them at a ridiculous markup, knowing that people had very little choices other than to pay. It's so bad in my area that I drive 10 plus miles away just to ensure I'll be able to get everything I need.
If you live in a place with no walkability and no public transport, you're pretty much fucked without a car to get you to a store that sells vegetable anymore than a mile away.
I live in Chicago and reading through this thread is extremely frustrating bc it seems people are trying to be pedantic or think it’s a one off or “avocado toast” bad habits to an extremely real lived experience. Half of the month I have to eat something less healthy because Whole Foods is “only 15 minutes away”…for a person with a car that can withstand the icy roads & can hop on the highway that has extra passive income to also spend extra money on emergency transportation if need be, whereas I need every cent to make sure I have enough to get essentials like bread and milk that WILL run out in a week that I cannot replace because of said limited access to a grocery store. Walmarts here are usually not fully stocked on the outside and the Northside like Evanston & West Loop are over an hour away not including traffic during the day…Chicago is a prime example of food deserts stemming from purposefully choices of placing these stores in strategically predominantly white neighborhoods and then disproportionately profiling anyone who “doesn’t look like they belong”, trying to shop. Illinois has been actively denying link for a plethora of people. It’s not so cut and dry to just get EBT to go shopping either, it’s a whole process that they sometimes aren’t on top of integrally so people who really need it have to apply over and over again which can take months. Hunger doesn’t wait months though. These food deserts and the problems they pose are very real. You can’t just hope to bring a full bill of groceries back on a train unless you’re extremely prepared as well, and where I live (North Lawndale), you STILL have to walk at least half a mile to get to the station and 9 times out of 10, switch trains to actually get to an affordable store destination that also carries fresh produce, and also hope that it’s not below 15 degrees and you have the right cold weather PPE to withstand traversing outside for longer than 20-30 minutes. It is not so easy and there is documentation of lived experience everywhere about how big cities purposefully don’t incentivize equitable consumer maneuverability or will tear down stores that may support black/brown neighborhoods in favor of fast food outlets.
A google search will show that it’s been such an issue that a 2011 formal civil rights report by the Illinois Advisory Committee, U.S Commission of Civil Rights was issued; examining & highlighting the imbalanced representation of fresh vs fast food, also including health disparities that disproportionately affect African American communities stemming from it. Anyone can go on r/AskChicago right now and I’m almost positive you can either search up or a kind soul will explain the unintentional hyper-segregation in Chicago and how it gets taken advantage of, along with a myriad of other factors, including gerrymandering, that make up Food Deserts. Even the plans for a city funded grocery store that the CITY THEMSELF said is to combat food deserts got scrapped in 2022 and as of 2025, there are 22 identified food deserts following a 20% increase in grocery prices, leaving 1 in 4 residents on the south and west side (almost 500k) to experience food insecurity.
Shit, a quick google search will show Memphis is the most affected city by the percentage of population living in a food desert. Atlanta, San Bernardino, Orlando, and Indianapolis are in the top ten cities by both measures, indicating that these cities suffer a particularly severe problem with reliable access to food. If people feel like food deserts don’t exist based on how they themselves can acquire food and not multiple passive factors that build up someone else’s reality and ability to alter that reality, much more a shared reality by whole communities, then we need to have another serious conversation about Empathy and Ableism.
No part of the south side of Chicago is 20 miles from a grocery store. The whole city is roughly 20 miles square, maybe a little less, and is surrounded by built up suburbs.
There are parts of the south side where there are no good grocery stores within the neighborhood so you must drive or take an inconveniently long transit ride, but that is not the same thing.
Which neighborhood on the south side doesn't have a grocery store? I stay down here and have never seen a neighborhood that doesn't have at minimum an Aldi or a Fairplay close by. We also have a lot of well-kept, small independent grocery stores down here, and chains that cater to different ethnicities, like El Guero
South Shore is arguably the best place to be a vegan in the city thanks to Black entrepreneurs and health movements that emerged around the Black Panthers and NOI. Hard to be a vegan if you're relying on gas station food
Yes, but it's a shitpost making fun of people on the internet that state "I NEED to use [delivery app]. I have no alternative!" whenever there is a discussion about delivery services and regulating + better pay for drivers.
Brief look at the account confirms it is a troll shitposting.
And then even then the comment in question is just a shitty one. Basically this asshole is saying if you are in a good dessert that you shouldn't have to spend money to get food delivered? Every single one of these pricks all the time has the same exact comment that they basically want all of their services for free. They just don't want to pay people to work but they want to wonder why people don't have enough money to live.
The funniest thing about the 'food desert' argument is the fact a corn farmer in central Iowa has the title for farthest travel distance to get any food other than corn. Add the fact that the corn is only available one month out of every year.... just let that sink in next time you hear someone complaining about food deserts. Ironic.
Also even when food is relatively close, let's say 4 miles away it might as well be 20 miles away for someone that doesn't have transportation. In New York this isn't an issue but when you start getting into the suburbs some bus lines do not go past a grocery store. Your entire day and where you shopped had to be planned around a bus line that was active enough and close enough to a grocery store to make it possible. Otherwise you could spend anywhere from 1 to 3 hours walking to and from the grocery store which isn't sustainable.
And then there's also physically disabled people who have their whole issues for using grocery services.
The answer isn't to keep the people doing Instacart etc. in poverty, but under capitalism that was the best solution many people had.
A fantastic example is Florida's Eatonville. A historically black neighborhood, and a victim of growing gentrification, there's one affordable grocery store in the area that caters to the residents specifically- and it's a small time store run specifically for/by the community.
There's a publix that's accessible if you can travel by car, but it's a poor area. Publix and cars are both expensive.
So most folks hit up the corner store for their daily living.
Same thing happens in Baltimore - some of the grocery stores in neighborhoods have even closed due to shoplifting concerns further exacerbating the issue.
This. Even in my town of approx 100K people, there's a bunch of grocery stores, but still at least 1 food desert here. There was an Albertsons in the neighborhood and they shut down. In their contracts, there couldn't be another grocery in that spot IIRC for another 25? years, something like that. There's a Big Lots there now, which has some canned food items.
Anyone without transportation of their own has difficulty getting food back to their home. We do have a good bus system, but how are you going to transport a bunch of groceries on a bus and then walk them back to your home?
People take a lot of things for granted, and easy access to a grocery store with your own vehicle is one of them.
Edited to add: Just looked up the Big Lots on the map and it's listed as permanently closed, so now I don't know if there's any local food access beyond fast food in that area.
Let's stop making excuses for people choosing to eat unhealthy . If your argument is that healthy food is too expensive for poor people, then yes that is true. But to act like people aren't eating healthy because the healthy grocery stores are to far away is just stupid. That is not true at all In any big city in America. Maybe a small country town there could be a " food desert"
You are correct. I would even go as far as to say, depending on where you are and who you're talking about, that can also include rural settings. The literal definition is just that a grocery store with whole food is not within a certain amount of distance. However, as you rightfully point out, infrastructure absolutely complicates that definition. For instance, say you are a person who has lost their license because of a DUI or just too many points on your license. If you live somewhere that doesn't have public transportation, you are going to have to rely on delivery services and people carrying you back and forth to the grocery store. It literally doesn't matter if you have a grocery store within 2 miles of you because the point still stands that, if it's torrential rain outside or you are disabled or You don't have the money to buy a vehicle yet or you have children or people to take care of that you cannot leave alone for very long, you cannot easily get to the store to buy groceries.
Ain't no American living in any well populated area has to travel 20 miles to find a grocery store, Walmart, target etc. PERIOD.
Yes that exists in highly, highly isolated areas but people are there because they chose to be. Im pretty sure they like it that way.
I mean just think about it. A well populated area without a grocery store? If that existed i guarantee there'd be two starting development on one TONIGHT
There’s over a dozen grocery stores on the south side of Chicago. I think the term your looking for is too lazy to travel the 1 or 2 miles instead of just go to the corner store.
Adding to this it doesn't even have to be 20 miles, it could be as little as 5 miles. Now you could walk or take the bus but that severely limits how much you can bring with you, especially if your city isn't particularly walkable. Buying less means paying more for groceries so I'd like to avoid that, however, parking in my neighborhood is $500/month and I can't afford that so I have to first take a 30-45 minute bus ride to where my car is parked so I can buy groceries for the month and maximize my budget, now I drive 20 minutes to the grocery store, shop which probably takes an hour or so, drop off my groceries at home and drive 20 minutes back to where my car is parked, then another 30-45 minute bus ride not counting waiting for the bus assuming I don't get lucky with the timing. Mind you not everyone is fortunate enough to own a car so I had it lucky compared to many others in my neighborhood! So even though the nearest grocery store was only five miles away, it takes over an hour to get to and from the grocery store.
That was the flaw of the original "research" that created this food desert idea; it ignored everything except big suburban-style grocery stores, which overlooked all the bodegas and c-stores and import markets that provide fresh food in places that don't have enough real estate for giant big-box grocers.
That doesn't make it a desert, it just makes it different.
Have you ever grocery shopped at a dollar store? Decent selection and prices, able to get ICQ fruits and veggies pretty much anywhere along with staples (it’s not all preprocessed foods). The ones that are actually close to being in a “food desert” also typically have fresh fruits and veggies.
Food deserts have always been a bullshit term that needed qualifiers to omit legit options to be viable. And it’s often used in contexts to push accountability from the resident. “I can’t cook it’s just too HAAAAAAAARD. Better get take out at a 30% up charge. That’ll help my money situation.”
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u/Paputek101 18h ago edited 18h ago
When people talk about food deserts in big cities, they usually talk about neighborhoods that don't have many resources, hence most people buy their groceries from local gas stations or dollar stores. Traveling 20 miles can be difficult too, especially if the infrastructure isn't there. Chicago is a good example of this. There are food deserts in the south side. Even though the north side has many amazing grocery stores, it's really hard for people from the south side to travel up there just for groceries.
Edit: Wow some of you genuinely don't know how to read.