Laurie,

 

In Austin, we have the Farm to Market program for city employees – we can order 
organically grown produce and pick it up at one location. The Children’s 
Optimal Health Network in Austin has been involved in mapping neighborhoods to 
locations of grocery store outlets. We have some of the same “nutrition 
landscape” issues this Baltimore story illustrates.

 

Best, Sue

Susan K. Soy, CA, Library Development Administrator
Austin Public Library P.O. Box 2287 Austin, TX 78768-2287
Phone: 512-974-7388 Fax: 512-974-7516 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Laurie Mahaffey
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2010 8:48 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ctls-l] FW: [syscon-tx] FW: URGENT REQUEST: PLEASE READ ANDRESPOND 
ASAP

 

Are any of you doing something like this in your communities?

Thanks.

Laurie

 

Laurie Mahaffey, Deputy Director

Central Texas Library System, Inc.

1005 West 41st Street

Austin, Texas 78756

www.ctls.net

[email protected]

512-583-0704 x18

800-262-4431 x18

 

________________________________

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Stacey Malek
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2010 8:41 AM
To: Syscon-Tx (E-mail)
Subject: [syscon-tx] FW: URGENT REQUEST: PLEASE READ AND RESPOND ASAP

 

Good morning,

 

Please see the email below from IMLS.  Please let me know if you know of any 
libraries in Texas that are doing something similar.

 

Thanks!

Stacey

Stacey Malek, Library Development Program Coordinator 
Texas State Library and Archives Commission 
Phone:  1-800-252-9386 (Texas only) or 512-463-5532 
Fax:  512-463-8800 
Email: [email protected] 

-----Original Message-----
From: Laurie Brooks [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, March 18, 2010 2:10 PM
To: Laurie Brooks
Cc: Mamie Bittner; Mary Chute; Terri Brown; Robin Cabot; Michele Farrell; James 
Lonergan
Subject: URGENT REQUEST: PLEASE READ AND RESPOND ASAP

We have received a request from WH Domestic Policy to find out ASAP whether 
other libraries across the country are offering services of a similar nature as 
described in the article below.  Do you know of other cities/libraries running 
similar programs and how the services are being used?  

 

Please Reply to All 

 

Thanks,

Laurie

 

Libraries help fill city nutrition gaps 
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/health/bal-md.hs.supermarket18mar18,0,3878327.story>
  

Virtual Supermarket serves residents of areas without grocery stores 
Baltimore Sun - Kelly Brewington 
<http://news.google.com/news/search?pz=1&cf=all&ned=us&hl=en&q=author%3A%22Kelly+Brewington%22&scoring=n>
  - ‎ March 18, 2010

Residents of two Baltimore neighborhoods that lack supermarkets will soon be 
able to order their groceries through a free delivery system that operates with 
the click of a mouse from the library.

The new Virtual Supermarket Project, city officials' latest attempt to solve 
Baltimore's long-standing history of neighborhoods with little access to 
healthful foods, offers laptops where residents can order groceries online from 
Santoni's Super Market in Highlandtown and pick them up the next day at the 
Orleans Street or Washington Village library branches of the Enoch Pratt Free 
Library. The libraries are in East and West Baltimore's biggest "food deserts," 
areas targeted by the Health Department for their scarcity of grocery stores 
and nutritious food options.

"We know in communities around this library and in Washington Village, 
residents must choose between shopping at corner stores that lack fresh produce 
or pay a premium for a ride outside their neighborhood, and we know this is not 
a fair choice," said Olivia D. Farrow, Baltimore's interim health commissioner, 
during an announcement Wednesday at the Orleans Street library. "Most city 
residents enjoy access to full-service, competitively priced grocery stores. 
The residents of East Baltimore and Washington Village deserve no less."

In the neighborhood surrounding the Orleans Street library, healthful food is a 
luxury. There's a Burger King, a cluster of corner stores and carryouts, but 
not a single supermarket within walking distance. It's no wonder, say health 
officials, that the neighborhood has one of the highest mortality rates in the 
city, with alarmingly high rates of heart disease, stroke and diabetes.

But making that change requires incentives to corner-store owners and programs 
like the virtual grocery store initiative to transform the nutrition landscape 
in the city's poor neighborhoods, Farrow said.

With $60,000 in federal stimulus money to fund the program for the next six 
months, the Virtual Supermarket Project is the first of 10 recommendations 
expected to roll out next month from the Food Policy Task Force, a city 
committee that Farrow helped oversee last year to tackle the problem.

The city Health Department is hoping to capitalize on a new national emphasis 
on nutrition. This week, first lady Michelle Obama implored grocery store 
manufacturers to speed up their efforts to cut salt, sugar and fat from food, 
be clearer about labeling and increase marketing of healthful products. Obama 
has also said she hopes to eliminate the nation's food deserts within seven 
years. It's part of her national campaign to combat childhood obesity and a 
White House push to improve the nation's health.

"As a country, we are seeing such a dramatic increase in diet-related 
diseases," said Anne Palmer, program director for the Johns Hopkins Center for 
a Livable Future and a member of the food policy task force. "It's not 
something that happened overnight, but now there's a recognition that we can't 
expect people to have a healthy lifestyle in an area that is completely 
unhealthy."

While the obvious choice - and the biggest hope of neighborhood residents - 
would be luring full-service grocery stores to poor communities, doing so isn't 
financially feasible since it's unlikely that neighborhoods can support them, 
Palmer said.

Years ago as Baltimore mayor, Martin O'Malley lobbied supermarket executives to 
bring grocery stores to all parts of the city. But in some neighborhoods, 
stores haven't been profitable. The recent closure of a 60,000-square-foot 
Mount Clare Safeway left a void in that Southwest Baltimore community that the 
virtual grocery store at the Washington Village library branch hopes to fill.

Instead of focusing on attracting more grocery stores to such areas, the task 
force hunted for new solutions to increase nutritious food in neighborhoods 
deprived of fresh fruits and vegetables, Palmer said.

Starting this growing season, for instance, Maryland Hunger Solutions, a 
project of the nonprofit Food Research and Action Center, is planning a pilot 
program that will allow food stamp users to use their EBT cards at farmers' 
markets with the aid of wireless technology, she said.

The virtual grocery store project is still very much a work in progress, its 
organizers say. The Health Department started testing it this fall in the 
basements of neighborhood churches. But residents complained that churches 
weren't always accessible to the public, and organizers sought alternatives.

In contrast, the library provides a free, public space with Internet access in 
virtually every Baltimore neighborhood, said Pooja Aggarwal, special assistant 
to the health commissioner and the program's coordinator.

Home delivery would be too expensive a cost for the Health Department to cover, 
said Aggarwal. Meanwhile, many residents in the neighborhoods that need 
groceries most lack Internet access to set up the deliveries, she said.

While the typical delivery fee for Santoni's online orders is $11.95, the 
expense to library patrons who pick up their groceries is nothing beyond the 
cost of their food. And Health Department staffers are on hand at the libraries 
to help residents navigate the store's Web site.

People can place orders at the Orleans Street branch on Wednesdays between 11 
a.m. and 3 p.m. for pickup on Thursdays between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. At Washington 
Village, orders are taken Mondays between noon and 3 p.m. and are picked up the 
next day between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. The program accepts cash, credit cards, food 
stamps and PayPal.

"Our goal is to get quality food to people at an affordable price," said Rob 
Santoni, general manager of the grocery store, a Highlandtown institution since 
1930, which has been doing online home delivery for nine years.

On Wednesday, Terri Summerhill, 74, ordered apples, grapes, peaches and pork 
chops with Aggarwal's help at a laptop. She typically shops at Santoni's in 
person, but because she uses a walker to get around, she must rely on friends 
or family to give her a ride. She avoids corner stores at all costs.

The food is expensive, said Summerhill, who lives in the nearby Latrobe Homes. 
"And the food is just not fresh - they'll put out vegetables that have already 
gone bad."

While she liked the idea of virtual ordering and plans to use it often, 
Summerhill said the program has drawbacks: no home delivery and limited hours. 
Health Department officials said they hope to get more funding to expand 
availability and include locations such as community centers and senior centers.

"This is like the tip of the iceberg of food access issues," Aggarwal said. "We 
are not only trying to engage the community in this project, but trying to 
engage them in a discussion on food access and how we can fix these issues. ... 
There's no way the virtual supermarket is going to solve all these problems, 
but this is one little piece of the solution."

 

 

 

Laurie C. Brooks | Associate Deputy Director | State Programs
Institute of Museum and Library Services
1800 M Street NW | 9th Floor | Washington, DC 20036
202-653-4650 |202-653-4602
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  | www.imls.gov 
<http://www.imls.gov/> 

 

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