The Standard Journal

Lawmakers hear food insecurity proposal

- By Tim Darnell

An Augusta-area resident who has taken on the challenge of bringing healthy food choices to his historical­ly impoverish­ed community plans to take his findings to a special state Senate committee investigat­ing food deserts and food insecurity.

Javon Armstrong lives in Sand Hills, an historic African American neighborho­od in west Augusta also known as Elizabetht­own adjacent to the National Register-listed Summervill­e Historic District.

“Our community has been stagnant for too many years,” Armstrong said. “We have an abandoned elementary school, Weed School, a quarter mile from Augusta University which is a perfect representa­tion of our potential wasting away. It’s been empty for over 50 years.”

Earlier this week, the Senate Study Committee on Improving Access to Healthy Foods and Ending Food Deserts was told by numerous experts that Georgia has one of the highest densities of socalled food deserts in the nation. Food deserts are geographic­al areas where healthy food is inaccessib­le or expensive.

Georgia ranks high in food deserts, insecurity, lawmakers told

“We are the standard food desert with little access to healthy choices,” Armstrong said. “To quote (18th century French lawyer and politician) Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, ‘tell me what you eat, and I’ll tell you who you are,’ which doesn’t say much about you when your diet consists of chips, soda and lo mein.”

Armstrong is hoping to tackle the issue of food insecurity by developing tower gardens, which he has already planted in his front yard.

Armstrong describes tower gardens as a soil-free growing system that can save up to 98% more water than a traditiona­l garden.

“They’re also vertical, which means you need only 10% of the space to grow,” he said.

The towers are sold through Juice Plus, a nutritiona­l supplement company. The towers come individual­ly as family gardens (three towers), community gardens (12) or tower farms (50 to 100). Each tower holds 28 plants.

Armstrong said he came across tower gardens back in 2018, when the Georgia Organics Convention was held in Augusta.

“We had a Winn Dixie in the community back in the ’80s, but ever since then, it’s Chinese food and corner stores,” he said. “Kids here don’t have a viable diet, and while it’d be great to get a community grocery store, we’re not going to get one anytime soon. We need solutions now.”

Armstrong has already spoken with state Sen. Harold Jones, D-Augusta, who introduced the resolution that created the study committee, and some local officials. He envisions a scenario where residents can eat and sell excess produce to restaurant­s and farmers markets, and community gardens in Sand Hills, then other Augusta-area communitie­s.

This story is available through a news partnershi­p with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educationa­l Foundation.

 ?? Special Photo: uGa/CaeS/Townnews.com Content exchange/Townnews.com Content exchange ?? Since its establishm­ent in 2013, the community garden in the small Fairmont neighborho­od in Griffin has expanded from 20 raised beds to 36, with wheelchair-accessible beds, a pavilion, a children’s garden, greenhouse, indoor bathrooms and crushed slate walkways.
Special Photo: uGa/CaeS/Townnews.com Content exchange/Townnews.com Content exchange Since its establishm­ent in 2013, the community garden in the small Fairmont neighborho­od in Griffin has expanded from 20 raised beds to 36, with wheelchair-accessible beds, a pavilion, a children’s garden, greenhouse, indoor bathrooms and crushed slate walkways.

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