Gov. Pritzker signs bill combating food deserts across Illinois

There were 3.3 million Illinois residents living in a food desert, according to a 2021 Illinois Department of Public Health report. The new measure will support existing grocers and help encourage new grocers by allowing stores receiving grants to be able to receive tax credits and other incentives.

SHARE Gov. Pritzker signs bill combating food deserts across Illinois
State Sen. Christopher Belt, D-Swansea, at a bill signing Friday of a measure that will provide $20 million to tackle the number of food deserts across the state.

State Sen. Christopher Belt, D-Swansea, at a bill signing Friday for a measure that will provide $20 million to tackle the number of food deserts across the state.

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Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed legislation Friday that aims to combat the state’s food deserts by sending $20 million to grocers to open and expand stores in underserved rural towns and low-income neighborhoods.

The measure establishes the Illinois Grocery Initiative, a new policy that will support existing grocers and help encourage new grocers by allowing stores getting grants to be able to receive tax credits and other incentives.

According to a 2021 Illinois Department of Public Health report, there were 3.3 million Illinois residents living in a food desert.

And a WBEZ-Chicago Sun-Times analysis found low food access in Chicago has jumped by 63% in the last decade. That includes the recent store closings of a Walmart Supercenter in Chatham, a Whole Foods in Englewood and an Aldi in Auburn Gresham — leaving people scrambling to find stores where they can buy healthy foods at a low cost.

“Too often, residents have to cross county lines, sometimes state lines to pick up bread and milk and produce as residents here in Venice know all too well,” Pritzker said at the bill signing in the Metro East region. “The Illinois Grocery Initiative will help increase access to affordable, nutritious food while helping to revitalize local economies by creating new small businesses or helping to save existing ones.”

The governor said 20% of the initiative will help stores replace aging equipment with energy-efficient alternatives to help keep costs down and help keep their doors open.

The grants will be available to grocery stores that are organized as independently owned, for-profit, co-ops and nonprofit organizations, as well as grocery stores owned by units of local government, according to state Sen. Christopher Belt, D-Swansea, who sponsored the measure.

Kristin Richards, director of the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, said information will be posted on agency’s website as soon as grant applications can be filed. The department also plans to commission a study to explore the reasons for market declines, historical disparities in access to food and to provide potential policy solutions.

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