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posted by takyon on Sunday February 17 2019, @05:00PM   Printer-friendly
from the nothing-in-that-store-costs-1$-anyway dept.

In a Washington Post story picked up by the S. Louis Post-Dispatch, reporter Rachel Siegel asks the question "Are dollar stores a response to poverty - or a cause?"

The fundamental premise of the story is

fear the stores deter other business, especially in neighborhoods without grocers or options for healthy food. Dollar stores rarely sell fresh produce or meats, but they undercut grocery stores on prices of everyday items, often pushing them out of business.

this creates what is referred to by one patron as a 'food desert'

their unstoppable rise...keeps grocers from opening.

implications are made

With fewer options for fresh food and health care, people in a North Tulsa ZIP code have an average life expectancy of 11 years less than those in South Tulsa, according to a 2015 city report.

"It creates an overall sense of the neighborhood being run-down," said Stacy Mitchell, [of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance]. "It's a recipe for locking in poverty rather than alleviating it."

Contrariwise, these stores

are a vital source of cheap staples

The last Dollar General to open is across the street from a senior citizens home. That store, Henderson said, is a lifeline to residents.

the council thinks it's appropriate for city government to pick winners and losers in the economy.

and while not typical, some do indeed sell fruits and vegetables

grapes, apples, avocados, potatoes sandwiched between bags of fried pork skins and cases of Michelob Ultra.

It's Walmart all over again in a way.

Grocery stores run on thin profit margins - usually between 1 and 3 percent. And they employ more workers than dollar stores to keep perishable food stocked.

"It's no longer the big-box grocery store" that threatens local businesses, said David Procter, a Kansas State University professor who studies rural grocery stores. "But it's the discount retailer that's coming to town and setting up shop right across the street."

Some localities have added restrictions on the stores, for example

Mesquite, Texas, a Dallas suburb, approved changes to its zoning code last year that will limit the number of dollar stores. The guidelines prevent them from opening within 5,000 feet of each other. And stores must dedicate 10 percent of floor space to fresh food.

Tulsa is working to solve the 'food desert' problem they attribute to the stores

This month, a deal was reached with ECO Farms, a local company that focuses on indoor vertical farming to solve food deserts. Two company executives, Jim Bloom and Adam James, said that while this is their first try at a grocery store, they're intent on making healthy food a reality in District 1 - not a luxury.

"We're attending to this as a human right, not a geographic privilege," James said.

However, as the article notes - "grocery stores have struggled here before"

The nearest dollar store to me is about four-five miles (15 minutes or so) on busy backroads. My experiences with them are lack of selection and significant product gaps. Very hit or miss and you just have to go shop somewhere like Kroger or Publix afterwards anyway to finish out your list, so I don't bother as I don't have the time to spend on the extra commute and double shopping.

If everyone was like me dollar stores might not be experiencing the success they very obviously are.
So how about some other perspectives? Do Soylentils love them or hate them? Is this a first world problem?


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  • (Score: 2) by AthanasiusKircher on Monday February 18 2019, @03:02PM (1 child)

    by AthanasiusKircher (5291) on Monday February 18 2019, @03:02PM (#802968) Journal

    I even started getting $6/lb chicken breast because the cheap (~$2 /lb) ones around here are like mutation-level huge and get dried out really easy.

    First off, if you don't want meat that's dried out, try buying a different cut. If you're getting boneless, skinless chicken breasts, you're getting lean protein -- which tends to dry out very easily. Or try cooking sous vide at a temperature significantly lower than the FDA recommends (but which is still perfectly safe, if done correctly).

    Second, I find it difficult to believe that if you're truly buying the "cheap" chicken breasts that they're drying out -- because almost all the cheapest chicken breasts I see sold today tend to be injected with a huge amount of brine and broth to make them more artificially juicy. (And to jack up the price: those $2/lb breasts are probably more like $2.50/lb, but you're paying for a bunch of water and salt to be added to them.)

    Third, I'm all for buying better quality meat, but do make sure you're actually getting better quality meat. "Free range" chicken can often still mean factory farms where the chickens spend their time in cramped buildings, but there's a door at the end of the building that none of the chickens actually ever go out of. "Natural" has no legally defined meaning. "No antibiotics" or whatever often is put on packaging where legally they couldn't inject those things into the animals anyway.

    Bottom line: be sure you're investigating the place where your meat is actually coming from, if you want to pay for "quality." Otherwise, that pack of "natural, fresh, humane" etc. chicken you're paying $6/lb. for may be effectively the same as the $2/lb. chicken. Heck, check the package... maybe your expensive chicken is injected with brine, and that's why it's more juicy!

    (You may know all of this -- but generally speaking, labels lie. Food producers will find just about any way of slapping a misleading term on a package if it can sell better and/or they can charge more for it...)

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 18 2019, @04:35PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 18 2019, @04:35PM (#803032)

    I have bought both at the same time and cooked side by side, it is like they are from different animals.