Fed up Hull residents plead for help luring grocery store to 'food desert'
'People care about getting food at a good price'
Some residents in the central Gatineau neighbourhood of le de Hull say they've gone longenough without a place to buy food. There has been no grocery in that sector of the city since the last one closed its doors in 1999.
A 2013 report by Health Canada, called Measuring the Food Environment in Canada, examined theprevalenceof food deserts in Canadian communities and found that "healthy eating is central tooverall health and reduces the risk of nutrition-related chronic diseases and obesity."
A 2011 paper published inArchives of Internal Medicine arguedthere is more evidence of "food swamps" than food deserts in Canada. These are typically disadvantaged areas "with a plethora of fast food; convenience stores selling calorie-dense packaged foods, super-sized sodas, and other sugar-loaded beverages; and other non-food retail venues selling junk food as a side activity," reads the paper by J.E. Fielding and P.A. Simon.
Nobody cares about a fountain. People care about getting food at a good price.-Jean-EmileVentrillon
AnnieLacasse, chair of Gatineau's ACORN chapter (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now),said there's an urgent need for a grocery store in the Hull community. A round trip to the closest store with her four children can take up to threehours and cost her $45 in bus andcab fare, she said.
Though le de Hullis comparable in size to Ottawa's Centretownneighbourhood, there are no grocery stores. Food in the area is served by a waiteror on adpanneurshelf.
'We absolutely have to have a grocery store'
"[It's a] huge problem... You can get crappy food here; there's a McDonald's, there's Giant Tiger," said resident Steve Moran.
"We absolutely have to have a grocery store."
Coun. Denise Laferrire, who represents the area, invited residents to a community centre Wednesday night to hear their ideas on how to spend $300,000 from a community building budget.
The funds were carried over from 2000, when Hull was an independent city.
The money has at times been earmarked for the establishment of a grocery store, either to see and support the creation of a community co-opor to offset property development costs.
Some of the other ideas presented by residents and by Laferrireherself during a brief slideshow included a skating rink chalet to improve a local park, planting trees and restoring a civic fountain.
"That [the fountain] is for what demographic? The kind of demographic that is not in this city currently," skoffedresident Jean-EmileVentrillon. "Nobody cares about a fountain. People care about getting food at a good price."
'Clear lack of will'
People in the crowd of 100 repeatedly urgedLaferrireto use the $300,000 for a supermarket. They loudly applauded those who pointed out that, without a grocery store, le de Hullis an incomplete community.
"I came tonight because I think there is a clear lack of will to solve the problem," saidYanic Bessette-Viens,who clashed with the councillorduring the meeting.
A proposal by HeafeyGroup to add a 30,000-square-foot Provigogrocery store to the ground floor of a 12-storey condo tower at the corner of Eddy and Wellington by fall of 2015 also fell apart before it began.
In January, Radio-Canada reported that the SAQ liqour depot, a former home of a Domion Grocery store until 1999, was being eyed as a possible site fora new Hull supermarket.
Too few residents, councillor says
By March, however, Laferrireopined that there were too few residents in the area to draw and support a grocery business. On Wednesday night, sheagain arguedthe le de Hullmarket istoo small to attract a national grocery chain.
His friendJerome Simonagreed, saying if you build it, they will come.
"If you have a nice fancy apartment building then it would bring the demographic that they want to be able to have a grocery store running," Simon said.
Laferriresaid she willcontinue to consult with residents before deciding how to spend the money.