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Bringing Social Change to a Food Desert One Burger at a Time

Today I have an inspiring guest post from Susan Marquis about a new restaurant in south central Los Angeles that is trying to change the food and employment picture in that community — and elsewhere. The rock star chefs and owners of Locol, which opened in Watts earlier this year, aim to use food (relatively healthy fast food) and an employment philosophy (hiring from the neighborhood, paying decently, helping employees have careers) to bring about social change. Marquis, dean of the graduate school at the RAND Corporation — a think-tank in Santa Monica, Calif. — is uniquely positioned to comment about the intersection of food, labor and policy. She teaches on the subject and has a book in the works about how the working conditions of tomato field laborers were vastly improved in Florida. Marquis has also documented a personal food obsession: For several years, she edited and published a newsletter called “Cheese Enthusiast [1].”

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By Susan L. Marquis

On a once-desolate corner of Los Angeles, something big is happening. At first glance, the story might seem to be about celebrity chefs and a reinvention of fast food, but it’s so much more than that. With the opening of the first in a planned national chain of restaurants called Locol, two chefs are taking on persistent and major social issues—so-called “food deserts,” chronic unemployment, and the rebuilding of communities that have long been underserved and faced myriad challenges.

Children waiting in line at LocoL ©Audrey MaCommunities like Watts.

Chefs Daniel Patterson and Roy Choi during team meeting at Locol Restaurant ©Audrey Ma

Chefs Daniel Patterson and Roy Choi during a team meeting at Locol Restaurant.

Chefs Roy Choi and Daniel Patterson opened Locol Watts this year—not incidentally—on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The restaurant may resemble a humble, neighborhood fast-food place but that’s just the physical manifestation of a much grander dream. The chefs talk about their latest venture as the start of a “revolution,” and so it may be.

Healthy food options from Locol Restaurant in WattsPart of their mission is to bring affordable and healthful food to forgotten areas that need it most, to urban food deserts where modestly priced, quality fresh food can be hard to find.

“We believe that chefs should feed America, and not suits,” the company says on its website [2].

Burg and Foldie from Locol Restaurant in WattsA few blocks away from Jordan Downs, a housing project with a long history of violence and crime, the restaurant owners are bringing change to the neighborhood one “burg” (hamburger) and “foldie” (taco) at a time, along with many other delicious and affordable foods.

Ribbon cutting at LocoL ©Audrey MaChoi and Patterson have big-league credentials; years apart both were named “best new chefs” by Food & Wine magazine. Three weeks into the new year, the magazine’s restaurant editor was already calling Locol the best new restaurant of 2016. [3]

Child showing his tray of LocoL Food ©Audrey MaIn many ways, the really good food is just a vehicle for social change. Because Locol seems to be about working with communities to build them up. What’s important here is that this is not a matter of charity or “helping the poor” (the median income in Watts [4] is among Los Angeles County’s lowest).

Ambassador DBow with his twin sons at LocoL ©Audrey MaThe owners say that it is instead about recognizing the promise and potential of communities and the people who live there. To blur the boundaries between community and restaurant, the Locol building was designed with ample screens on the windows and doors.

Staff member at LocoL  ©Audrey MaBetween 80-90% of the staff at Locol are from the neighborhood. Choi points out that the job application asked simply for a name, contact information and why the applicant wanted to work at Locol. There’s no requirement for prior experience in a neighborhood where unemployment is high and the percentage of residents 18 or younger [5] is among the highest in Los Angeles County.

Staff at LocoL ©AudreyMaNearly all of the cooks, cashiers and managers hail from the neighborhood. More than 40 people have been hired, most of them full time, and they are being paid well above minimum wage.

Staff member at LocoL ©Audrey MaTwo days before the restaurant opened, most of the cooks had only been cooking professionally for a week, and they were already displaying the talent to make it in the field, according to Patterson. As their skills expand, so will the restaurant chain and its employees’ horizons — a second venue, in Oakland, is set to open tomorrow (May 25) and the Watts location is closing for two days while the whole team goes to Oakland for the opening. A third location is being planned for San Francisco. A member of the Locol Watts staff has been in Oakland training new employees, an example of the restaurant’s commitment to providing workers with the opportunity for a true career path.

Staff members at LocoL ©Audrey MaThis approach overturns the common wisdom and reality of restaurant employment, where workers tend to hopscotch from restaurant to restaurant in search of better wages and opportunities but usually never make it to the best-paying jobs, according to the 2013 book “Behind the Kitchen Door.” [6]

Child eating at LocoL ©AudreyMaNeighborhood by neighborhood, a few dozen jobs at a time, Choi and Patterson are tackling complex and persistent public policy problems and could very well succeed in their own way in communities where generations of government programs and charitable endeavors have had limited impact.

They’re doing it by recognizing the humanity of communities, the untapped talent within them, the promise of the market—and the not inconsequential power of really good food. If the restaurateurs can follow their plan for expansion, which targets underserved communities but is not limited to them, Locol could transform lives and communities even as it challenges our very notion of what fast food can be.

Susan Marquis of RAND [7]Susan L. Marquis [7] is dean of the Frederick S. Pardee RAND Graduate School and vice president for Emerging Policy Research and Methods at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation. She teaches about food and labor policy.

PHOTOS: All Locol photos by Audrey Ma [8]; used with permission.

Want to remember this restaurant so you can eat there on your next trip to Los Angeles? Pin it to your restaurant Pinterest board using the graphic below. Get inspired!

Healthy Fast Food from Locol Restaurant in Watts

Locol Watts
1950 E. 103rd St.
Los Angeles, CA 90002
Open every day 7 a.m.-9 p.m.

Child eating at LocoL @Audrey Ma