Food Justice

In 2021, over 13.6 million households in the United States experienced food insecurity and 1 in 8 households with children in the United States could not buy enough food for their families.

Food insecurity is a problem in America, and the solutions needed to address the problem are complex.

Food insecurity can be related to lack of stable employment, lack of accessible/affordable transportation to and from grocery stores, systemic racism or racial discrimination, lack of access to affordable housing and/or healthcare.

Poverty is cyclical and complex, there are no silver bullet solutions. But we believe that if we work together, we can enact meaningful change and work to decrease food insecurity in the Louisville region.

The Food Justice initiate is seeking to find and fund innovations that are working to increase food access and decrease food insecurity in the Louisville region.

This Reconstruct Challenge was supported by funds made available by the Kentucky Department for Public Health’s Office of Health Equity from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for STLT Public Health Infrastructure and Workforce, under RFA-OT21-2103.

Louisville residents experiencing food insecurity in 2021

Among its cohort of peers, Louisville is the worst performer in terms of households that do not have a car and live relatively far from a grocery store (more than 1 mile).

In Louisville and its peer cities, the childhood food insecurity rate is much higher than the overall food insecurity rate.

1 in 5 Louisville residents live in a food desert

September, 2023

Ten finalists participated in a live pitch event in Louisville where five winners received $100,000 to implement their solutions Louisville and Southern Indiana communities.

Supported by

Previous
Previous

Housing Affordability

Next
Next

Equitable Employment