In huge swaths of Los Angeles, it's generally easier to get a bag of Hot Cheetos than a head of lettuce.
That's just one of the unsettling findings published recently by the Urban & Environmental Policy Institute at Occidental College. It studied food availability in three neighborhoods -- Pico-Union, Westlake/MacArthur Park and part of South Los Angeles. In these dense urban areas, home to about 420,000 Angelenos, there were only 15 full-service grocery stores.
Supermarkets are one of the few reliable providers of fresh fruits and vegetables, which are crucial to a healthy life. Yet South Los Angeles has one supermarket for every 28,000 residents. By comparison, Los Angeles County as a whole has a supermarket for every 18,000 residents.
So where are people getting their food? In the vast stretch between the 10 and 105 freeways, the majority of food outlets are liquor shops, convenience stores or fast-food chains. Another assessment of food availability, this one in 2004 by the nonprofit Community Services Unlimited, captured a grim snapshot: In a 1.5-square-mile segment of South Los Angeles, there were eight restaurants, 50 fast-food outlets and 39 liquor stores. The four grocery stores were clumped together, beyond walking distance of much of the survey area.
Even if you do find healthy food staples -- low-fat milk or apples, for instance -- at convenience stores, the Occidental report says they will likely cost noticeably more than at supermarkets. That's another healthy-food hurdle in regions where household income is about 40% of the citywide average.
This is a situation that's not just unhealthy but, as filmmaker Morgan Spurlock ("Supersize Me") and author Eric Schlosser ("Fast Food Nation") made clear, downright hazardous. No wonder South Los Angeles -- which is predominantly Latino and African American -- teeters on a health precipice. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly 24% of Latinos and 20% of African American kids ages 6 to 11 are overweight. African American men have a nearly 30% higher death rate from heart disease than any other ethnic group. Both Latinos and African Americans suffer from diabetes at a rate more than 50% higher than whites. South L.A.'s food environment abets these diseases the same way chemical-laced dumps spawn cancer and smog-choked cities aggravate asthma.