| Literature DB >> 35891801 |
Yasamin Shaker1,2, Sara E Grineski1,2, Timothy W Collins3,2, Aaron B Flores2,4.
Abstract
In the 1930s, the Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC) graded the mortgage security of urban US neighborhoods. In doing so, the HOLC engaged in the practice, imbued with racism and xenophobia, of "redlining" neighborhoods deemed "hazardous" for lenders. Redlining has caused persistent social, political and economic problems for communities of color. Linkages between redlining and contemporary food access remain unexamined, even though food access is essential to well-being. To investigate this, we used a census tract-level measure of low-income and low grocery store food access from the US Department of Agriculture Food Access Research Atlas, redlining data from Mapping Inequality Project, and demographic data from the American Community Survey. We employed generalized estimating equations with robust covariance estimates to analyze data pertaining to 10,459 census tracts in 202 US cities. Tracts that the HOLC graded as "C" ("decline in desirability") and "D" ("hazardous") had reduced contemporary food access compared to those graded "A" ("best"). Increases in contemporary census tract proportions of Black, Hispanic, or other racial/ethnic minority residents, as well as disabled residents, were associated with reduced food access. Increases in contemporary proportions of residents age 75 years and older or those without a car were associated with better food access. Tracts that underwent housing redevelopment since being graded had better food access, while those undergoing gentrification had reduced food access. Results suggest that issues of redlining, housing discrimination, racism, ableism, displacement, and food inaccessibility are deeply intertwined.Entities:
Keywords: Food access; Food justice; HOLC zones; Racially/ethnically minoritized groups; Redlining
Year: 2022 PMID: 35891801 PMCID: PMC9303837 DOI: 10.1007/s10460-022-10340-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Agric Human Values ISSN: 0889-048X Impact factor: 4.908
Descriptive statistics for independent variables (n = 10,459 census tracts)
| Variables | Minimum | Maximum | Mean | Std. deviation | Yes | No |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low-income/Low access (1/2 mile) | 3593(0.344) | 6866(0.656) | ||||
| Low-income/Low access (1 mile)a | 833(0.08) | 9626(0.92) | ||||
| “A” Best | 677(0.065) | 9782(0.935) | ||||
| “B” Still Desirable | 2152(0.206) | 8307(0.794) | ||||
| “C” Declining | 4704(0.45) | 5755(0.55) | ||||
| “D” Hazardous | 2926(0.28) | 7533(0.72) | ||||
| Prop. Black, non-Hispanic | 0 | 1 | 0.264 | 0.308 | ||
| Prop. Asian, non-Hispanic | 0 | 0.871 | 0.072 | 0.118 | ||
| Prop. Hispanic | 0 | 1 | 0.229 | 0.255 | ||
| Prop. Other race, non-Hispanic | 0 | 0.368 | 0.034 | 0.032 | ||
| Prop. no automobile | 0 | 0.936 | 0.232 | 0.196 | ||
| Prop. disability | 0 | 0.472 | 0.130 | 0.062 | ||
| Prop. under 5 years | 0 | 0.366 | 0.063 | 0.030 | ||
| Prop. over 75 years | 0 | 0.464 | 0.056 | 0.035 | ||
| Pre-1979 | 9998(0.956) | 461(0.044) | ||||
| Post-1980 | 461(0.044) | 9998(0.956) | ||||
| Gini index | 0.165 | 0.903 | 0.455 | 0.066 | ||
| Population density (per sq. km.) | 24.79 | 84,508.95 | 7267.04 | 9257.50 |
Data in the Yes/No columns are given in the form Frequency (Proportion)
aVariable used in sensitivity analysis
Fig. 1Low income and low food access census tract centroids with HOLC zone ratings (n = 10,459)
Results from the binary logistic GEE predicting odds of a tract having low income and low grocery access a ½ mile (LILA)
| Parameter | Model 1 | Model 2 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Odds ratio | Hypothesis Test | 95% Wald Confidence Interval | Odds Ratio | Hypothesis Test | 95% Wald Confidence Interval | |||
| Sig | Lower | Upper | Sig | Lower | Upper | |||
| (Intercept) | .074 | < .001 | .058 | .095 | .151 | < .001 | .116 | .197 |
| “B” Still Desirable (ref: A) | 1.800 | < .001 | 1.418 | 2.284 | 1.752 | < .001 | 1.407 | 2.181 |
| “C” Declining (ref: A) | 2.066 | < .001 | 1.627 | 2.622 | 2.344 | < .001 | 1.848 | 2.974 |
| “D” Hazardous (ref: A) | 2.488 | < .001 | 1.948 | 3.178 | 2.281 | < .001 | 1.781 | 2.921 |
| Prop. Black | 1.542 | < .001 | 1.451 | 1.638 | ||||
| Prop. Asian | 1.072 | .010 | 1.017 | 1.129 | ||||
| Prop. Hispanic | 1.468 | < .001 | 1.373 | 1.569 | ||||
| Prop. Other | 1.205 | < .001 | 1.086 | 1.337 | ||||
| Prop. no automobile | .819 | < .001 | .762 | .881 | ||||
| Prop. disability | 1.551 | < .001 | 1.420 | 1.693 | ||||
| Prop. under 5 years | 1.025 | .264 | .981 | 1.072 | ||||
| Prop. over 75 years | .714 | < .001 | .656 | .777 | ||||
| Median Age of Housing ≥ 1980 (ref: ≤ 1979) | .742 | .017 | .581 | .948 | ||||
| Gini | 1.174 | < .001 | 1.106 | 1.247 | ||||
| Pop. Density | .255 | < .001 | .206 | .315 | ||||
HOLC “A” grade is the reference category. The models used a binomial distribution, a logit link function, an exchangeable correlation matrix and adjust for clustering based on county and eight categories of median age of housing value. All continuous variables were standardized
Sensitivity analysis: comparison of direction and significance of odds ratios between the two dependent variables
| Low-income and low grocery access assessed at ½ milea | Low-income and low grocery access assessed at 1 mile | |
|---|---|---|
| Intercept | [−] | [−] |
| “B” Still Desirable (ref: A) | [+] | [+] |
| “C” Declining (ref: A) | [+] | [+] |
| “D” Hazardous (ref: A) | [+] | [+] |
| Gini | [+] | + |
| Prop. Black | [+] | [+] |
| Prop. Asian | [+] | [−] |
| Prop. Other | [+] | [+] |
| Prop. Hispanic | [+] | [+] |
| Prop. no automobile | [−] | [−] |
| Prop. disability | [+] | [+] |
| Prop. under 5 years | + | [+] |
| Prop. over 75 years | [−] | [−] |
| Pop Density | [−] | [−] |
| House built post-1980 (ref: pre-1980) | [−] | − |
In this table “ + ” under the odds ratio column means a positive association whereas a “−” means a negative association. […] indicates that the p-value is less than 0.05
aFull results are presented in Table 2 (Model 2)