Now please, don’t get me wrong. I am all for healthy eating.
I am all for exercise, keeping the weight down (I like to see my feet when I
look down), making sure that my coronary arteries aren’t all clogged and my
blood pressure is where it needs to be. I am all for that and that is how I try
to live. I am an adult and that makes me responsible for the waxing and waning
of my waistline, a lesson I learned when I realized that my “college 10” (the
weight gain people experience their first year in college) was actually a
“college 40.” It took a long time for me to take responsibility and lose that
weight, but I did it. It was my weight and it was my responsibility to either
keep it—and all the attendant health risks that went with it—or lose it.
It is all about personal responsibility. In fact, when you
think about it, everything that happens in our lives has an element of personal
responsibility. This is why I was so dismayed to read about the recent Los
Angeles City Council action against the fast food industry in South
Los Angeles. For the health of the people who live there, the LA
City Council placed a moratorium on the construction of new fast food
restaurants in the area and made it harder for those that are currently there
to expand or remodel. At the same time, they want to put an economic
development plan into place to encourage better restaurants to open up shop in South LA. The
evidence, developed by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, that
Council Member Jan Perry, the measure’s sponsor, cited for the move is
compelling:
- 30% of South Los Angeles
residents are obese.
- 19.1% of Metropolitan Los Angeles residents are
obese.
- 14.1% of residents on the affluent Westside of
Los Angeles are obese.
In other words, the poor residents of South
LA have a higher (10.1%) obesity rate than the overall population
of the LA metropolitan area and a 15.9% higher obesity rate than those in the
moneyed Westside area. With figures like that, it’s only natural that the folks
in the LA City Council would want to help. Right? Add in the fact that most of
these people in South LA don’t have
transportation to go to better restaurants and they don’t generally have the
money to spend on a nice, sit down dinner at, say, T.G.I. Friday’s.
Of course, that is the problem, isn’t it? Places like South Los Angeles get the restaurants they do because the
people of the area can afford them. You can spend $5 and change at McDonald’s
for a burger, fries and drink and $10 or more at a place like Friday’s for the
same thing. If you had a radically constricted income, which would you choose.
For most people it comes down to cost, and in these difficult economic times,
the good stuff that the LA City Council wants to offer the people of South LA is becoming more and more expensive.
The parent company of Bennigan’s and Steak and Ale, for
example, both of which would be acceptable under the plan, has gone out of
business. The franchise restaurants are still in operation but the corporate
places are gone. One reason cited was that less people are eating out these
days due to high gas prices. Another was that the food, all of which is
prepared fresh, is becoming increasingly expensive. The surviving restaurants
are faced with imposing price increases on their menu items or watching their
profits dwindle. Since wages don’t rise with inflation; and the usual answer to
this dilemma is a price hike, I wonder how these restaurants will survive if
they do open up in an economically troubled area like South
LA.
The fact is that they won’t survive, which is the reason
they are not there already. The existing fast food places will continue to do
business and the more upscale establishments will either close or alter their
menus and ingredients until they can compete, and that means cutting corners in
a way that could never happen in more affluent areas. This isn’t a rich vs.
poor, white vs. black issue, it is a simple issue of the market. It’s the same
thing that keeps Rolls Royce dealerships out of respectable middle-class
neighborhoods. Those communities—as nice as they are—just don’t offer the
clientele necessary to support the business.
Surely, this obvious truth of market capitalism occurred to
someone in LA’s City Council. Yet the measure passed with overwhelming support.
Was it a panicky attempt to “do something” about the problem of obesity? For
any issue, you can find politicians and other governmental functionaries who
demand action today yet don’t reckon on the consequences of that action. They
simply want to be able to grin at the press and their constituents and proclaim
victory, which then firmly cements their position on the side of right. Is it
simply that, groundwork for a nice photo-op when the first new Chili’s opens
up, or is there something more to it?
If this was really about health, wouldn’t they have targeted
all restaurants and wouldn’t they have forced them to offer healthy
alternatives to the cheap, saturated fat-laden slop they normally serve? That
would conform to the argument presented in favor of this legislation. Then
again, there are many places that insist restaurants use only non-saturated
fats when they cook. Why not go that route? After all, some of these fats are
actually good for you. Why not work
to educate people about nutrition? Are they not responsible for what they
shovel into their own mouths or do the City Council members think that Ronald
McDonald and The King are holding guns to their heads? In other words: Why not
try something that actually addresses the problem in a direct and measurable
fashion? Why attack the problem economically through taxes and regulation? I
can only imagine one reason, and it has nothing to do with health.
What happens when upscale (or at least higher-scale)
businesses move into an area? You start to see a lot of urban renewal. Old,
ramshackle buildings get torn down and new buildings replace them. Old
businesses are replaced by new ones and as values rise, those who can afford to
stay, do. Those who cannot afford to are forced to move on. The fact that LA’s Community Redevelopment Agency has developed a package
of incentives that include assistance in finding parcels of land, low-interest
loans, matching funds for burying utility lines, discounted electricity rates,
and tax credits is a sign that urban renewal is a big part of the plan. After
all, only stand-alone fast food restaurants with drive-through lanes are
subject to the ban.
That would be tough to prove, but you must admit that all
the pieces are there. Council member Jan Perry, who spearheaded the initiative,
even mentions the proposal in her official biography:
Perry is also involved
in planning strategies that will maximize opportunities for development in South Los Angeles and share in downtown's job
opportunities resulting from its increase in housing and entertainment centers.
One of these
initiatives is her proposed one-year moratorium on new fast food outlets in South Los Angeles. This measure, together with a grocery
store and sit-down restaurant incentive package that she spearheaded, will
provide opportunities for new businesses to invest in South
Los Angeles. This will help the community to grow in a direction
consistent with the desires and best interests of the people that live and work
there.
It does seem that Perry and her cronies are intent on making
some big changes in that community. Those changes may even be for the better,
it is hard to tell, but still it is always worrisome, especially for long-standing
small businesses, when the government comes in and starts to monkey around with
the local economy, determining which businesses are acceptable and which are
not with little or no reflection on the immediate impact that these decisions
will have on the people of the community, their eyes only on the still-distant
prize. You can make the argument that government has the right to do this.
Adult-oriented businesses can be run out of town. Some years ago, Mayor Daley
of Chicago had
all the gun shops run out of town. You could say that if you can do it with
those businesses, why not with restaurants? The short answer to that question
is that no one needs a strip joint or
a gun shop. Food—affordable food—on
the other hand is a necessity.
So, how will all of this turn out? I don’t know. I do know
that there is more to this than the cholesterol content of a Big Mac and I
wonder what the owners of the small businesses that will be affected by these
proposed changes said at the meetings, assuming they said anything at all. The
chains and a couple of restaurant associations are protesting, but where was
everyone when this plot was first hatched?
I’ll keep you posted.
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