Keeping America Fed: U.S. Food Insecurity in the COVID-19 Pandemic
This issue brief provides definitions and summaries of the concepts of “food insecurity” and “food insufficiency” and offers initial data
Food insecurity is a household-level economic and social condition of limited or uncertain access to adequate food. The defining characteristic of very low food security is that, at times during the year, the food intake of household members is reduced and their normal eating patterns are disrupted because the household lacks money and other resources for food.
Individuals and families living in food deserts are at risk for experiencing food insecurity. Food deserts, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), are areas with large proportions of households with low incomes, inadequate access to transportation, and a limited number of food retailers providing fresh produce and healthy groceries for affordable prices. The USDA found that 23.5 million people live in low-income areas that are further than 1 mile from a large grocery store or supermarket, and that 11.5 million of these people have low incomes themselves.
Another USDA report noted these factors contributing to food deserts:
Of all these factors, the 2012 researchers found that concentrated poverty and minority populations emerge were the critical factors in determining low access to healthy food. Compounding the issue is that environments characterized by low income and education levels and high unemployment are most likely unattractive markets for supermarkets and grocery stores. The researchers suggested that public policies may help to alleviate the most dire consequences of living in a food desert by lowering other barriers to access, such as providing better public transportation to enable access to retailers in surrounding areas or addressing education and employment shortcomings directly. It may also be feasible to encourage smaller stores in food deserts to carry healthier products.
Each of these programs described below are administered by the USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service (FNS).
Farmers markets provide access to healthy, nonprocessed, fruits and vegetables. Farmers markets in all 50 states now accept SNAP benefits. According to USDA FNS data, 7,377 farmers and farmers markets across the country were authorized to accept SNAP benefits in 2017; in 2017, more than $22.4 million SNAP benefits were redeemed at farmers markets. Below are examples of farming communities working to provide low-cost fresh produce to low-income familes:
Having sources of healthy food located in a community is one aspect of combatting food insecurity; the other is providing transportation to healthy food sources outside the community. Most public transportation services design stops at major food grocery chains, and many have designed specific grocery runs. A sampling of systems that have these dedicated services is given below:
Some other steps public transportation can take to improve access to healthy food are:
This fact sheet outlines the role of transit agencies in improving food access, offers examples from transit agencies across the country, and shares solutions that will allow transit agencies to create or strengthen the connection between neighborhoods and grocery stores.
This resource explores potential collaboration strategies mobility managers, transportation providers, and summer meal sites can pursue to reduce the number of children who go hungry each summer. Concludes with suggested strategies that mobility management professionals can use to support access to summer food programs within their communities.
Part 1, titled Strategies and Resources to Support Connections between Summer Food Service Programs and Transportation, explored ways in which public transit programs can partner with FNS-funded summer food programs to ensure youth have access to nutrition over the summer months, showcasing two examples from Texas. Part 2, titled Strategies to Connect Youth with Summer Food Service Programs, featured two communities as well as a short review of other strategies featured in an upcoming NCMM Mobility Management In Practice brief on youth food access.
This issue brief provides definitions and summaries of the concepts of “food insecurity” and “food insufficiency” and offers initial data
This report details the interconnected challenges of transportation access and healthy food access, and provides strategies and solutions for communities
This report explores potential collaboration strategies mobility managers, transportation providers, and summer meal sites can pursue to reduce the number
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