Thursday, April 28, 2011

Sacramento Needs to Embrace Street Food


Reposting due to SactoMoFo. Original date 7/28/10. 
Updates in purple.

Here's a question for you. Why is it that the state capitol of one of the most progressive and forward thinking states in the U.S. is so backward when it comes to the hottest food trend in the country - gourmet food trucks?

The last two weeks I've gotten to enjoy the variety of food trucks and other street foods in two of the biggest street food cities in the U.S. - Portland and San Francisco. Let's start by looking a little bit at these two cities before we look at our own.

Portland has become known for its street food due to its over 400 licensed street food vendors. As I showed in my post earlier this month, even as many as 22 on one street block! It recently went head to head with New York City to claim best street food. (See referenced articles at end.) Definitely it has a lot of variety and some very well known trucks featured nationally on Vendr.tv, a video blog for street food, and other national networks and publications. The reason there are so many is that Portland welcomes them. In an interview with Vendr.tv, Portland Mayor Sam Adams explains that the city makes a point of welcoming street food vendors with easier permitting ordinances that still maintain integrity of health and safety concerns.



In California, both San Francisco and Los Angeles have also opened themselves up to street food after having to deal with similar city imposed obstacles that Sacramento still has. I talked to Matt Geller of the Southern California Mobile Food Vendors Association. He says that it is important to note that the State has laws governing food trucks and that municipalities can only write ordinances that concern health and safety. The Association is successful in combating these ordinances because there is no good argument that moving a vehicle every half hour or a quarter mile is helping health and safety. They are actually working on, and looking forward to, a couple of cases in Southern California to take to the California Appellate Courts. Once they successfully challenge these ordinances in the Appellate Courts then all local ordinances in the State would be struck down.

Let’s turn to Sacramento. What’s the problem here? Although no one will say outright, here are some of the arguments that seem to come up against street food. 1) Restaurants don’t want the competition outside their front door. 2) Street vendors aren’t as sanitary as restaurants. 3) Street vendors attract the ‘wrong element’.

Restaurants don't want the competition. This is an easy one. We are looking at two totally different crowds! There are the folks who want cheap, quick street food. They are looking for cheap eats that they can get to go or eat standing up or walking. The other side is the crowd that wants to sit down, take the time, socialize with a date or friends, and wants a complete meal.

If you frequent the farmers markets downtown during the week, you will see a few food vendors in the parks. They are doing a brisk business. The weekday lunch crowd loves them. Maybe you have a job where you can't get away for much of a lunch and so you run down and grab a quick bite from the street vendors and take it back to your desk. You were never going to go to a brick and mortar restaurant in the first place.

In other cities the trucks have been respectful of  restaurants by not parking too close to them, especially with the same type of food. Portland Mayor Adams says, "restaurants and other businesses have benefited from being close to food carts because as more people walk to-and-from the street vendors, the brick-and-mortar places benefited from foot traffic."

Health & Safety. Another concern is that street vendors aren't as clean. The truth is that they have to pass the same inspections as restaurants. Also consider the fact that the trucks move so they aren't stuck in one location to gather vermin. According to Multnomah County's (Portland) inspector, "carts have fewer major health code violations per inspection than restaurants do." In California, trucks are required to be housed in commissaries overnight where they are flushed out and cleaned.

Trucks are, in fact, inspected many more times a year than restaurants are. Every time they participate in a Special Event (festival, fair, etc.) they are inspected anew. In the case of Drewski's, he has been inspected 8 times in his first three months in business. Is a restaurant inspected every time they do a catered event?

There goes the neighborhood. The last of the big arguments is that street food attracts the wrong element to the area. In reality, trucks are rarely parked for more than two to four hours in any one spot. The traffic they attract are those that are interested in purchasing good food. The vendors know that they need to clean up the area before they leave or they won't be welcomed back. So basically, any traffic impact is minimal. And, as we said above, wouldn't some businesses benefit as people stroll by them to get to their favorite food truck?

Another point to be made is that most of the times the street vendors are not even on the street. Often they arrange to lease spots on private property, such as parking lots. So why should it bother the city to let them stay there if they have arranged it with the owners? The thing is that when they are on public property they are now falling under zoning laws.  In Portland you will find many street vendors grouped together in pods on empty lots. During my visit last week, I didn't see any that were on the actual street. There, Portland eased the laws again. As long as stationary mobile carts have functional wheels, an axle for towing, and are located in a commercial zone, they are considered vehicles and are not required to conform to the zoning or building code.

Interestingly, Sacramento does have a few 'hot dog' vendor style carts that are being permitted on the streets. When I talked to Ryan at Chunks, the pastrami/hot dog vendor at the corner of  8th and L, he told me that he had a permit for that specific southwest corner and he wasn't required to move after a certain amount of time. He is a different classification, though, because he is just reheating prepared foods versus cooking from fresh food stuffs. Still, it seems sort of hypocritical that the council allows some street food (carts) and not others (trucks).

Who's Cooking?
A few more points that are important to note. First is where some of these food trucks are coming from. Due to the popularity of the food networks on television and the interest in eating well, there has been a tremendous increase of people going to and graduating from culinary schools. So many, in fact, that there is a lot of competition for limited jobs at the higher end restaurants. Often chefs will think about opening their own restaurants. That takes a lot of startup money with many restaurants failing in the first year. Many chefs are now turning to food trucks to get their cooking out. For about $100,000 a chef can start a food truck, considerably less than a brick and mortar. They don't have to worry about leases, equipment, staff, liquor licenses, advertising, hours, and more. The trucks are the biggest cost. They only have to hire a couple of employees, can make their own hours, and most of the advertising is done by word of mouth and tweeting. So much easier as a way to start in the biz. Some of the more popular trucks have expanded to multiple trucks, franchising, and eventually opening up real restaurants.

Arlington, VA, September 12, 2001-- Local fire...Image via Wikipedia

Related to new chefs turning to trucks is that many already established chefs are also turning their attention to street food. Top Chef Master Ludovic Lefebvre is unveiling his new fried chicken truck in about a month. He's working with a group called Mobi Munch. I spoke with Joshua Tang, co-founder and CEO. Mobi Munch works with chefs to bring their foods to the masses via trucks. They provide the trucks, social media assistance, help with permits and licenses, as well as assisting in researching food and truck design. We talked in front of his newly launched Chairman Bao truck and he explained that his group works with the chefs to create and test their recipes and then analyze the steps involved from order to serving. This then influences the design of the truck itself so that it is laid out in the most efficient manner. It boils down to - these are high quality, gourmet trucks.

What can you do to help bring food trucks to Sacramento? First, sign the online petition created by another local blogger, Joshua Lurie-Terrell at Yumtacos.com. Next, write to each one of the Sacramento City Council members. Lastly, talk up the issue with everyone. The more people who know and understand the issues, the more support we can get to have the rules relaxed. The City needs to realize that food trucks are rolling across America and they might as well embrace them.



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15 comments:

Eileen said...

I'm all for food trucks! Wouldn't that be an added source of income for the city, since the trucks would need to be licenced.
I think we need to band together and change the city's mind on this. I'm sure even the chef's who are thinking about opening another restaurant would be in favor of a truck as opposed to the cost of a brick and mortar building. Makes sense to me.

Tara said...

I think food trucks sound like a great idea, and Eileen makes a really good point as well about it bringing another source of income to our city. I know lots of people in Downtown who will be very supportive of this issue

Anonymous said...

Many restaurants do indeed support food trucks - just not the few who gave enough money to the City Council in order to get the ban passed.

Susan said...

I agree! especially as all the less expensive eating options downtown are disappearing. and really, who can eat a hot dog every day?

Steph said...

OK, I'm all for GOURMET food trucks that follow some basic regs. Here is my issue: I live in the residential area of South Oak Park. We get a lot of food trucks that come by all day long, playing annoying loud ice-cream-truck-type music, blocking the road, and generally just looking disgusting. These aren't nice trucks like the ones in your photos. These look more like roach coaches literally. They have dirty rusty exteriors with peeling paint and and peeling-off names and badly done old signage that say odd things like "Hot Nacho" (singular... like there is just one nacho on the truck?). If their exteriors are that bad, it makes you wonder what their interiors and food quality are like. And hearing the music they play is so annoying! They're not ice cream trucks, so turn off the ice cream truck music!! I'm so sick of hearing Pop Goes the Weasel and La Cucaracha all evening!!! These are the trucks that make everyone downtown wary of food trucks. If we can prevent these kind of trucks and get some nice clean well-signed trucks that don't play ice-cream-truck music and offer quality food, I'm all in. And I think they shouldn't be going on the residential streets; they should park on the main street (for example, if the trucks on my block parked on Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. instead, they'd still be walking distance from the homes, without actually having to park in front of my house or the neighbors'!). (By the way, is there regs against the stuff I listed? Should I be calling someone to report these trucks?)

Ms. Munchie said...

No, I think you can tell from the post that we are not talking about roach coaches, we are talking about a different level of trucks. Roach coaches fall under the category (usually) of the reheat prepared meals. But they still need to move every 30 mins and 1/4 mile.

Anonymous said...

The photos of the trucks you posted sure looked nice, but, they represent about 2% of the fleet. 98% of them are ROACH COACHES. The majority of trucks have minimal sanitation, work out of run down common kitchens, and are only inspected once a year, at the health dept, so that they have enough time to clean up once a year to pass the inspection. a truly bad idea, probably pushed by the food truck manufacturing companies

Ms. Munchie said...

Sometimes we bloggers wonder about posting negative/bitchy comments by Anonymous posters. It's my blog, I can deny the posts. But once in a while I will allow a couple.

Once again, to reply to the last poster and others, these trucks get inspected as often and sometimes more than restaurants. I feel more secure eating from a GOURMET truck that is cleaned very night, that is cooking fresh, made-to-order food versus reheating prepackaged food, than a questionable restaurant where you can't see the kitchen. As much as I love Le Bonne Soupe, there's an example right there. He had a roach infestation last year that he had to get exterminated. You are not going to find a roach infestation on a gourmet truck!

C.G. the Foodie said...

Your comment in response to the anonymous post is dead-on. Plus increasing acceptance of food trucks allows for an increase in safety standards. However it's true that the restaurants we visit that aren't on wheels may appear clean on the outside but aren't necessarily more sanitary than the ones on wheels.

Living in Lodi and Stockton growing up, I loved hitting up the trucks for a quick and flavorful lunch or dinner... and I am alive to tell the tale :o)

Food&Wine Diva said...

Great article! I'm all about the food truck movement! Let me know if there's anything I can do to help, if your able to bring Eat the Grid here!! YEAH FOR FOOD TRUCKS!

Anonymous said...

what a great article! i don't undestand either, the lack of support by city council. brings income, brings people together and you have great food. waht is there not to like?

wanted to share that i don't think your link to the sactomofo.com works. tried it and it didn't take me there.

BatSpit said...

Thank you so much for this article! I just moved to Sacramento- this issue is so exciting and so unique- I'll be at the festival this weekend, with my camera and an appetite. Thanks again!

BatSpit said...

(also, thanks for leaving the 'anonymous' comments in- it was brave to leave it in, and it makes your argument better when you can show what the opposition sounds like)

Negosyo franchise said...

The food street business is a real great thing. I don't see what's bad in great diverse tastes, low cost food and great people. I sure prefer it over any fast food restaurant in the local mall.

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