Listen: ‘Food apartheid’ starves minority neighborhoods on Long Island

James Boone wakes up at 6 a.m. nearly every Sunday, driving his van to Trader Joe’s and other grocery stores on Long Island in order to rescue food destined for the dumpster. After gathering mountains of produce, Boone heads to a parking lot in his hometown of Hempstead, where a small army of volunteers joins him in unloading the bounty and packing the food into hundreds of cardboard boxes.

Hempstead, like about two dozen other communities on Long Island, is a food desert, meaning fresh, nutritious groceries are difficult to access. Boone volunteers with the non-profit Community Solidarity, which runs food share programs to connect residents with free vegetarian meals. More than 220,000 people on Long Island face food insecurity, meaning they might not have easy access to quality food. Of that, some 65,000 are children, according to statistics from Long Island Cares, a large food bank on Long Island.

Read the rest…

Read Original Article: Listen: ‘Food apartheid’ starves minority neighborhoods on Long Island »