People can purchase fresh produce at the Prescott Farmers Market, which participates in the Double Up Food Bucks program. (Photo by Chelsea Shannon/Cronkite News) Kelly Villa, market manager of Prescott Farmers Market, bought some carrots and leafy greens. (Photo by Chelsea Shannon/Cronkite News)

PRESCOTT – When the residents of Paulden want to buy more than just basic groceries, they must drive to the next town over in Chino Valley to find a full-service grocery store.

Paulden resident Maria Reyes said she buys her eggs, vegetables and meat at the nearby Prescott Farmers Market, but it helps that she works there as well.

For Paulden residents, the lack of access to fresh food can range from a mere inconvenience for some to a major challenge for those without transportation.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has designated Paulden a “food desert,” an area that lacks immediate access to healthy, affordable food.

Many Arizona communities have long struggled to address the issue. Local experts say there are a variety of ways to alleviate these hardships. Some solutions include broadening government-assistance programs, growing community gardens and building supermarkets.

But because food deserts most often occur in rural and low-income areas, some solutions work better than others.

For example, adding a supermarket to a community isn’t always viable. John Andrews, a professor at Queen’s University in Canada, said markets are often conservative and reluctant to open stores. They look at population trends and an area’s median income before investing in new properties.

Here’s a closer look at how some of these solutions have played out in Arizona communities:

Shanti Rade, the co-owner of Whipstone Farm, sells goods at the Prescott market. (Photo by Chelsea Shannon/Cronkite News) Shannon Gallagher feeds her daughter Clara Shrader-Gallagher tamales while taking a break from shopping at the Prescott Farmers Market. (Photo by Chelsea Shannon/Cronkite News) Shanti Rade, co-owner of Whipstone Farm, talks about the produce with a customer at Prescott Farmers Market. (Photo by Chelsea Shannon/Cronkite News) Kelly Rivas, the manager at the Prescott Farmers Market, said there is a community building aspect to farmers markets. (Photo by Chelsea Shannon/Cronkite News)

Double Up Food Bucks program

It can get expensive to buy fresh fruits and vegetables.

And it’s not uncommon for people who use the Electronic Benefit Transfer system, formally known as food stamps, to live in food deserts, said Kelly Rivas, the manager of the Prescott Farmers Market.

The lack of available grocers often leads people to rely on drug or convenience stores for food. But local farmers markets can provide a healthy alternative.

Some of these markets have begun offering a program called Double Up Food Bucks, which provides extra money to spend on produce for those using their EBT cards at grocery stores and farmers markets.

The Prescott Farmers Market is one of those markets.

Shanti Rade, the co-owner of Whipstone Farm, sells goods at the Prescott market. She said the program not only provides better food, it can help educate the public.

She said farmers can provide information about the plant, including potential uses and recipes.

“You’re just never going to get kind of interaction when you go to a store,” Rade said. “Half of my time here is just education, talking people through things and getting that chance to have that interface to share something that I know with them.”

Las Milpitas Community Garden in Tucson is growing grape vines and trees in its greenhouse. (Photo by Chelsea Shannon/Cronkite News) One of the growers at Las Milpitas Community Farm also raises hens. The farm uses their waste for compost. (Photo by Chelsea Shannon/Cronkite News) Chris Lowen, a manager of Las Milpitas Community Farm in Tucson, said the farm provides an opportunity for community members to grow and learn about healthy foods. (Photo by Chelsea Shannon/Cronkite News)

Community gardens

In the middle of a food desert in Tucson, the Community Food Bank of Southern Arizona has grown its community garden into a community farm.

For the past six years, the food bank has operated the Las Milpitas Community Farm.

“We are in the heart of a food desert,” farm manager Chris Lowen said.

Lowen said that across the street from the farm, thousands of low-income residents live in a trailer park and require food assistance.

Lowen said they conducted a survey and found that 70 percent of those who use the farm have monthly household incomes of $2,000 or less.

The farm provides an opportunity for community members to grow and learn about healthy foods.

The food bank provides about five kinds of seasonal plants per plot for their gardeners, who also have the option to plant their own food.

Lowen said community members in need can use a plot if they volunteer at least three hours a week to help maintain the overall farm.

Lowen mentioned that one of the farm’s goals is to empower community members to become leaders.

“That gives us the ability to extend the work that we do,” Lowen said. “If we can continue to move from basic gardening stuff to growing more food to leadership development to community organizers, then we can see more of the changes we want to see in policy and in terms of neighborhoods taking care of their own food needs.”

The new Fry’s Food Store development in downtown Phoenix also includes 200,000 square feet of retail and office space, restaurants, parking and more than 300 high-rise apartments. (Courtesy of RED development) The Fry’s Food Store will become part of a mixed-use project by RED Development. The project is set to be completed in 2019. (Photo by Alyssa Hesketh/Cronkite News)

Attracting supermarkets

Downtown Phoenix will soon get a new Fry’s Food Stores, which may help alleviate the food desert there.

As more people moved downtown, the lack of grocers became apparent to officials at RED Development, which is developing the project.

Jeff Moloznik, vice president of RED Development, said the decision to build had more to do with the growing population than anything else.

Editor’s Note A previous version of this story misstated Phoenix Councilwoman Kate Gallego’s title. She is no longer vice mayor.

“As a former downtown resident, I know first hand how difficult it can be without convenient access to a full-service grocery store,” Phoenix Councilwoman Kate Gallego said. “For residents who live and work downtown, especially those who rely on light rail and other public transportation, this store is exactly what we need.”

Andrews, the executive director of the Queens Real Estate Roundtable, said in downtown Toronto, they had a difficult time getting a market. The city wanted to attract more residents with a market, and the grocers did not want to invest in the space until enough potential customers lived there.

The city of Phoenix will provide $18.3 million in incentives, and RED Development broke ground on the new market on April 13. The project, at Jefferson and First streets, is slated for completion in 2019.

The project also will include apartments, office space and other retail uses.