BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                       



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          |SENATE RULES COMMITTEE            |                  AB 2720|
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                                 THIRD READING


          Bill No:  AB 2720
          Author:   John A. Perez (D), et al
          Amended:  8/20/10 in Senate
          Vote:     21

           
           SENATE HEALTH COMMITTEE  :  6-2, 6/30/10
          AYES:  Alquist, Cedillo, Leno, Negrete McLeod, Pavley,  
            Romero
          NOES: Strickland, Aanestad
          NO VOTE RECORDED: Cox

           SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE  :  7-4, 8/12/10
          AYES:  Kehoe, Alquist, Corbett, Leno, Price, Wolk, Yee
          NOES:  Ashburn, Emmerson, Walters, Wyland

          ASSEMBLY FLOOR:  53-22, 6/2/10 - See last page for vote


           SUBJECT  :    Public health:  food access

           SOURCE  :     Author


           DIGEST  :    This bill creates the California Healthy Food  
          Financing Initiative, and requires, by July 1, 2011, the  
          DFA (DFA), in consultation with the Department of Public  
          Health and the Department of Social Services, to prepare  
          recommendations to be presented upon request to the  
          Legislature, regarding actions that need to be taken to  
          promote food access in the state.  It requires the DFA, to  
          the extent that federal and private funds are made  
          available, to coordinate efforts to implement the  
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          initiative and maximize the funding opportunities provided  
          by the federal 2010 Healthy Food Financing Initiative.

           Senate Floor Amendments  of 8/20/10 require specified state  
          departments to coordinate efforts to maximize federal  
          funding for healthy food access.

           ANALYSIS  :    

           Existing law
           
          1. Existing law requires, until January 1, 2013, the  
             Department of Public Health (DPH) in conjunction with  
             the DFA, to develop a "Healthy Food Purchase" pilot  
             program, in no more than seven counties, to increase the  
             sale and purchase of fresh fruits and vegetables in  
             low-income communities, as specified.  The department  
             must also develop a process for evaluating the  
             effectiveness of the pilot, and contract with an  
             independent external evaluator to conduct the  
             evaluation. 

          2. Requires the department to use specific criteria for  
             choosing the counties to be considered in the pilot  
             program. 

          3. Specifies that the department shall apply for available  
             federal matching funds to support the pilot, and that no  
             General Fund monies shall be used to fund the program. 

          This bill:

          1. Creates the California Healthy Food Financing  
             Initiative.

          2. Requires, by July 1, 2011, the DFA, in consultation with  
             the DPH and the Department of Social Services, to  
             prepare recommendations to be presented upon request to  
             the Legislature, regarding actions that need to be taken  
             to promote food access in the state.

          3. Specifies that the DFA, in consultation with the state  
             DPH, the Department of Social Services, and the  
             Treasurer, may coordinate efforts to maximize funding  

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             opportunities provided by the federal 2010 Healthy Food  
             Financing Initiative.

          4. Creates the California Healthy Foods Financing  
             Initiative Fund in the State Treasury, to be comprised  
             of federal, state, and private funds for the purpose of  
             expanding communities, and to the extent practicable, to  
             leverage other funding, as specified.

          5. Specifies that the Healthy Food Financing Initiative  
             shall only be implemented to the extent that federal  
             funds are made available for this purpose, and makes  
             other technical changes. 

           Background
           
          A food desert is a geographic area with limited access to  
          affordable, quality, and nutritious foods.  The 2008 Farm  
          Bill required the United States Department of Agriculture  
          (USDA) to study food deserts.  Findings from that study  
          include: (1) of all U.S. households, 2.3 million (2.2  
          percent), live more than a mile from a supermarket and do  
          not have access to a vehicle. An additional 3.4 million  
          households (3.2 percent) live between one-half to 1 mile  
          from a supermarket and do not have access to a vehicle, (2)  
          area-based measures of access show that 23.5 million people  
          live in low-income areas (areas where more than 40 percent  
          of the population has an income at or below 200 percent of  
          federal poverty thresholds) that are more than 1 mile from  
          a supermarket or large grocery store.  However, not all of  
          these 23.5 million people have low incomes.  If estimates  
          are restricted to consider only low-income people in  
          low-income areas, then 11.5 million people, (4.1 percent of  
          the U.S. population) live in low-income areas more than 1  
          mile from a supermarket, and (3) data on time use and  
          travel mode show that people living in low-income areas  
          with limited access spend significantly more time (19.5  
          minutes) traveling to a grocery store than the national  
          average (15 minutes). However, 93 percent of those who live  
          in low-income areas with limited access traveled to the  
          grocery store in a vehicle they or another household member  
          drove. 

          A subset of food deserts are areas increasingly referred to  

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          as "food swamps."  A food swamp is a defined geographic  
          area where the overabundance of high-energy foods (for  
          example, caloric snacks sold at convenience stores or high  
          fat, high caloric foods sold at fast food outlets)  
          overwhelms the healthy food options.

           Healthy Food Financing Initiative (HFFI)  .  In February of  
          2010, the Obama Administration (Administration) released  
          details of HFFI costing over $400 million, which will help  
          bring grocery stores and other healthy food retailers to  
          underserved urban and rural communities across the nation.   


          The HFFI is a partnership between the federal Departments  
          of the Treasury, Agriculture, and Health and Human  
          Services.  HFFI will promote a range of interventions that  
          expand access to nutritious foods, including developing and  
          equipping grocery stores and other small businesses and  
          retailers selling healthy food in communities that  
          currently lack these options.  Residents of these  
          communities, which are sometimes called food deserts, and  
          are often found in economically distressed areas, are  
          typically served by fast food restaurants and convenience  
          stores that offer little or no fresh produce.  Lack of  
          healthy, affordable food options can lead to higher levels  
          of obesity and other diet-related diseases, such as  
          diabetes, heart disease, and cancer. 

          Through this new multi-year HFFI, and by engaging with the  
          private sector, the Administration intends to work toward  
          eliminating food deserts across the country within seven  
          years.  The first year of funding proposes to leverage  
          enough investments to begin expanding healthy foods options  
          into as many as one-fifth of the nation's food deserts, and  
          create thousands of jobs in urban and rural communities  
          across the nation.

          The HFFI appears to be modeled after the Pennsylvania Fresh  
          Food Financing Initiative (FFFI) that the Pennsylvania  
          Legislature created in 2006.  FFFI is an innovative program  
          that increases the number of supermarkets and grocery  
          stores in underserved communities across the State of  
          Pennsylvania.  Developed as a public-private partnership,  
          FFFI serves the financing needs of operators located or  

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          locating in communities where infrastructure costs and  
          credit needs are not met by conventional financial  
          institutions to increase the availability of fresh food in  
          low-income neighborhoods.  FFFI uses market analysis,  
          leveraged capital, and public policy to stimulate  
          supermarket development.  Investing in quality food markets  
          in underserved communities directly benefits low- and  
          moderate-income communities.  

           FISCAL EFFECT  :    Appropriation:  No   Fiscal Com.:  Yes    
          Local:  No

          According to the Senate Appropriations Committee analysis:

                          Fiscal Impact (in thousands)

           Major Provisions                     2010-11     2011-12    
           2012-13          Fund
           
          HFFI federal grant fund                                 
          likely in the millions of dollars                            
            Federal/
          expenditures, potential                                   
          General
          state-match and continuing
          funding for projects pressure

          Healthy Food Purchase                                   
          likely in the millions of dollars                            
             Federal
          Program, program grant
            awards

          Report recommendations                            cost  
          pressure, likely in                                 General
                                   the millions of dollars


           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  : 
          AYES:  Ammiano, Arambula, Bass, Beall, Block, Blumenfield,  
            Bradford, Brownley, Buchanan, Caballero, Charles  
            Calderon, Carter, Chesbro, Conway, Coto, Davis, De La  
            Torre, De Leon, Emmerson, Eng, Evans, Feuer, Fletcher,  
            Fong, Fuentes, Fuller, Furutani, Galgiani, Hall, Hayashi,  

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            Hernandez, Hill, Huber, Huffman, Jones, Bonnie Lowenthal,  
            Ma, Mendoza, Monning, Nava, V. Manuel Perez, Portantino,  
            Ruskin, Salas, Saldana, Skinner, Solorio, Swanson,  
            Torlakson, Torres, Torrico, Yamada, John A. Perez
          NOES:  Adams, Anderson, Bill Berryhill, Blakeslee, DeVore,  
            Gaines, Garrick, Gilmore, Hagman, Harkey, Jeffries,  
            Knight, Logue, Miller, Nestande, Niello, Nielsen, Norby,  
            Silva, Smyth, Tran, Villines
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Tom Berryhill, Cook, Lieu, Audra  
            Strickland, Vacancy


          CTW:do  8/23/10   Senate Floor Analyses 

                       SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  NONE RECEIVED

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