Government groceries? New leftist New York mayor eyes supermarket experiment
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Mayor Zohran Mamdani vows city-run stores will focus “on keeping prices low, not making a profit”.
PHOTO: AFP
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NEW YORK - New Yorkers struggling to afford food in the country’s biggest city – and often exorbitantly expensive financial capital – may finally get a break if the incoming socialist mayor
Some 1.4 million residents in the Big Apple are food insecure, meaning they’re unable to regularly access affordable, healthy food. One in three use food banks.
Democratic Socialist Zohran Mamdani won a stunning victory
The 34-year-old vows the stores will focus “on keeping prices low, not making a profit”.
It’s a novel idea in a city more associated with Wall Street wealth.
The stores would be exempt from rent and taxes, with savings passed to shoppers, while centralised warehousing and distribution would aim to reduce overheads.
But Mamdani’s experimental plan to open five pilot stores on unused city land, as well as free buses and subsidised childcare, is still only small-scale – and not universally welcome.
Associate Professor Nevin Cohen from CUNY’s Urban Food Policy Institute said Mr Mamdani’s plan remains “pretty vague” on basic points like location or even type of store.
President Donald Trump, who hosted Mr Mamdani for a surprisingly cordial visit at the White House
And private supermarket mogul John Catsimatidis, a Trump ally, is campaigning against Mr Mamdani’s city groceries, asking “how do you compete against that?”
Affordability crisis
No one disputes the need for cheaper and better food.
More than 40 per cent of people in the poorest of New York’s five boroughs, the Bronx, eat neither fruits nor vegetables in an average week.
Some 1.8 million New Yorkers are already dependent on federal food subsidies, a programme briefly frozen during a row in Congress over government spending in November.
Even Mr Trump agreed with Mr Mamdani at their meeting that “getting housing built and food and prices” should be priorities.
“The new word is affordability. Another word is just groceries,” Mr Trump said.
New York has an existing city programme to lure supermarkets to under-served areas called Food Retail Expansion to Support Health (FRESH). It uses tax and planning incentives to entice developers and private store operators.
At one outpost of the FRESH programme in East New York, a deprived Brooklyn neighbourhood, a Fine Fare supermarket opened under a new apartment building in 2023.
Ms Laura Smith, the NYC Department of City Planning’s deputy executive director, told AFP that FRESH helps “encourage more fresh food supermarkets across the city in areas where residents have a harder time reaching full-line grocery stores”.
In return for permission to build extra apartments, the developers of the store and 40 others were obliged to allocate space for a supermarket. Thirty-five more are in the pipeline.
National solution?
Mr Mamdani is cool on the FRESH project, saying on his website that instead of “spending millions of dollars to subsidise private grocery store operators we should redirect public money to a real ‘public option’”.
But Fine Fare is a hit locally.
“I like it because it’s close by to where I live and they gave everything you need,” said retiree Ivette Bravo, 63, shopping for the holidays.
The scheme, started under mayor Mike Bloomberg in 2009, has survived two other mayors and is fixed in city law.
The FRESH programme had been “modestly successful” as it “helps people not have to travel further”, said Prof Cohen, the policy expert.
If Mr Mamdani’s project is successful, it will add another option.
But everything being done adds up to a drop in the bucket for a city with some 1,000 supermarkets in total.
In the end, solving food insecurity isn’t something New York can do alone, whatever the innovations, Prof Cohen said.
“That actually requires national-level policy.” AFP

