Lawmakers Again Look For Solutions For Indiana Food Deserts

By Jill Sheridan, IPB News | Published on in Uncategorized
(Photo: Wikipedia)

This year, Indiana’s food deserts are the sole focus for a summer legislative study committee for the first time, even though it’s the third time lawmakers have discussed ways to help the issue – with no results to show for it yet. Indiana Public Broadcasting’s Jill Sheridan reports.

Around 800,000 Hoosiers live in areas with limited access to healthy food.

Rep. Robin Shackleford (D-Indianapolis) has co-authored legislation for the last three years to address to the lack of health food options in Indiana. She says this time around the message seems to be sinking in.

“I think when we go back to session, after we hear everything from today, I think we’ll see multiple bills coming out of this,” Shackleford says.

Supporters from various organizations testified about possible solutions, from community gardens to transportation. Indiana Healthy Weight’s Eric Beers says there are different answers for different areas.

“It could be a business solution, it could be a nonprofit solution, it could be that folks need education so it could be grants to show people how to cook,” Beers says.

He says people on the local level need support.

“To create a program that allows anyone that has a good idea, really unleash innovation,” Beers says.

Past legislation would have created healthy food financing through grants or loans. But a bill that sets up a program infrastructure without specific funding attached has a better chance during the upcoming, non-budget session.

Gleaners CEO John Elliot says food deserts and food insecurity are tied and lawmakers are more aware than ever.

“Hunger is not in isolation,” Elliot says. “Hunger is typically a symptom of something else and I think they are seeing that now.”

NOW PLAYING

Indiana Public Radio

Live on 92.1 FM Muncie | 90.9 FM Marion | 91.1 FM Hagerstown / New Castle

From IPR