Why Healthy Food Financing Matters
The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) estimates that 40 million people live in neighborhoods without easy access to fresh, affordable, and nutritious food options. Accessing healthy food can mean multiple bus rides while carting groceries and children, or scrambling to find someone with a car who is willing to drive to the nearest market. This problem affects residents in both urban and rural parts of the U.S. — it is estimated that 14% of food-insecure households are in rural areas where a full service grocery store may be several miles away. These areas are greatly in need of reliable transportation, in addition to the jobs and economic activity that grocery stores and healthy food retail can provide.
The good news is that healthy food retail projects have been proven to revitalize local economies, expand access to healthy food, and improve health across the United States. Ensuring access to healthy food is an important element of a fair food system, one in which everyone, including those living in low-income communities, can fully participate, prosper and benefit. A fair food system is one that, from farm to table, from processing to disposal, ensures economic opportunity — high-quality jobs with living wages; safe working conditions; access to food that is healthy, affordable, and in line with personal and family preferences; and environmental sustainability.
The federal Healthy Food Financing Initiative has helped leverage more than $320 million in grants and an estimated $1 billion in additional financing. The initiative has supported 1,000 grocery and other healthy food retail projects in 48 states across the country, revitalizing economies, creating jobs, and improving health.
What Is a Healthy Food Financing Initiative?
Healthy Food Financing Initiative (HFFI) refers to a policy model at the local, state or federal level that aims to provide financing for healthy food projects. These policies improve access to healthy foods in low-income areas; create and preserve quality jobs; and revitalize communities by providing loans and grants to eligible fresh, healthy food projects. Projects can include grocery stores, farmers markets, food hubs, co-ops and other businesses that sell healthy food. This financing allows retailers to overcome the high monetary barriers to entry in low-income urban, suburban, and rural areas that are not sufficiently reached by healthy food retail. For more information about HFFI programs across the country, view The Food Trust’s HFFI Impacts Report.