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🩺 Public Health Rules/Healthy Food Retail

Lancaster vs Los Angeles

How do healthy food retail rules compare between Lancaster, CA and Los Angeles, CA?

Lancaster has fewer restrictions than Los Angeles.

Lancaster, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

LACDPH and partners run the Healthy Neighborhood Market Network countywide, helping corner stores in food-desert communities stock fresh produce. The program offers refrigeration grants, technical assistance, and marketing support; participation is voluntary, not a mandate.

View full Lancaster rules β†’

Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Los Angeles restricts new stand-alone fast-food restaurants in parts of South LA and incentivizes healthy food retail through the Health Food Zone overlay and corner-store conversion programs run with LA County Public Health.

View full Los Angeles rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLancasterLos Angeles
OperatorLACDPH and LA Food Policy Council-
Program typeVoluntary corner-store conversion-
Geographic focusUSDA-identified food deserts-
Support offeredRefrigeration grants, signage, training-
County-wide mandateNone; incentive-based only-
Original ordinance-Ord. 180103 (2008 South LA)
Overlay area-Roughly 32 square miles South LA
Format restricted-Stand-alone chain fast-food
Healthy retail program-LA Food Policy Council network
Permit pathway-Conditional use permit required

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lancaster FAQ

Does LA County ban fast food anywhere?

Not at the county level. The City of LA has a South LA fast-food formula-restaurant overlay, but unincorporated areas and most cities have no countywide moratorium. Check city zoning for local restrictions.

How does a corner store join the network?

Apply through LACDPH or the LA Food Policy Council. Eligible stores in priority neighborhoods receive grants for produce coolers, redesign, supplier matching, and marketing once a participation agreement is signed.

Are there benefits for shoppers?

Participating stores accept CalFresh EBT, often add Market Match dollar-doubling for produce, and stock USDA-recommended healthy items. The program helps ensure fresh produce access in low-access census tracts.

Los Angeles FAQ

Can I open a new fast-food restaurant in South LA?

Stand-alone fast-food chains are restricted in the overlay. New locations need a conditional use permit and may face denial. Sit-down restaurants and grocery stores are unaffected.

What help exists for corner stores selling produce?

The Healthy Neighborhood Market Network through LA County DPH and the LA Food Policy Council offers refrigeration grants, technical assistance, and marketing support for stores adding fresh fruits and vegetables.

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