The World

A quart of milk, a loaf of bread … and childhood obesity?

A wave of obesity blamed (at least in part) on kids eating food from local convenience stores has the Los Angeles City Council considering an unusual proposal: limiting the development of new corner stores. The Takeaway considers various opinions.

A wave of obesity blamed (at least in part) on kids slurping cheap slushies and scarfing chips from local convenience stores has the Los Angeles City Council considering an unusual proposal: limiting the development of new corner stores in South L.A. Is the council’s proposed moratorium a smart way to address a public health epidemic? Or is it an unfair attack on the convenient storefronts that serve low-income neighborhoods, where big chain grocery stores don’t dare to enter?

We speak to public health expert Dr. Deborah Cohen; Lark Galloway-Gilliam, the executive director of a nonprofit health policy and education organization in South Los Angeles; and Jeff Lenard, the spokesperson for the National Association of Convenience Stores.