July 2017

An Equity Profile of the Five-County San Francisco Bay Area Region

Overview

The five-county San Francisco Bay Area region is already a majority people-of-color region, and communities of color will continue to drive growth and change into the foreseeable future. While the Bay Area economy is booming, rising inequality, stagnant wages, and persistent racial inequities place its long-term economic future at risk. In fact, closing racial gaps in income would boost the regional economy by nearly $138 billion. This is an update to an initial profile released two years ago. It was developed to assist The San Francisco Foundation in integrating equity throughout its grantmaking. Read the profile.

Read the 2015 summary (web version/download PDF) and the full profile (web version/download PDF). 

Media: Study Finds S.F.’s Ethnic Diversity Dwindling (SF Chronicle), A Startling Map of How Much Whiter San Francisco Will Be in 2040 (CityLab), S.F. Could Be Much Whiter in 25 Years, While the Rest of Region Gets More Diverse (KQED News), Study Shows San Francisco Getting Less Diverse (KGO 810 News), San Francisco Poised to be "Whitest County" in Bay Area (NBC Bay Area), SF Is on Track to Be the Whitest County in the Region (SF Curbed)

July 2017

WEBINAR-Tour the New Healthy Food Access Portal

Overview

This interactive webinar, hosted by PolicyLink, The Food Trust, and Reinvestment Fund, tours the newly redesigned Healthy Food Access Portal. Building upon the feedback and input of stakeholders, the refreshed site features new and refined resources to better support advocates, entrepreneurs, and other stakeholders to take their work – whether a local policy campaign or the launch of a local healthy food business – to the next level. The Portal team will highlight key features, including updated navigation, new content for advocates and entrepreneurs, and interactive tools to find policy information, available funding opportunities, and other resources in your state.

A Healing Garden in Cleveland


By Tanya Holmes and The FARE Project

This piece features Tanya Holmes of the Ka-La Healing Garden Center, a participant in The Food Trust’s FARE (Food Access Raises Everyone) Project and funded partner of the Center for Healthy Food Access. With support from Saint Luke’s Foundation, The Food Trust is implementing a comprehensive and collaborative approach to food access in Cleveland and surrounding Cuyahoga County. The FARE Project is guided by a diverse advisory committee made up of local stakeholders and provides technical assistance, strategic planning, and additional resources for local efforts. The Food Trust’s Center for Healthy Food Access is a national collaborative effort supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to increase access to and demand for healthy foods and beverages in underserved communities. Through the Center, mini-grant funds were made available to relevant groups in Cleveland and Cuyahoga County. The FARE Project’s advisers nominated local grantees, and more than 20 grassroots groups and residents — including nutrition educators, urban farmers, and faith-based organizations — are now funded partners of the Center and an integral part of The FARE Project.

Tanya Holmes is the founder, owner, and operator of Ka-La Healing Garden Center. It is her vision to build a safer and healthier environment for residents in the Central, Fairfax, and surrounding neighborhoods of Cleveland. Holmes, a graduate of the Neighborhood Leadership Development Program, has created an interactive community space that includes an urban garden, a summer jobs program, a networking and entrepreneurship group for women, and more. Fresh produce grown on-site is sold every Saturday at her farm stand, which accepts SNAP and senior vouchers

With funding from the Center for Healthy Food Access, Holmes is finalizing a business plan and establishing a 501(c)(3): The Ka-La Healing Garden Foundation. I’m getting to a place of stability, where I can purchase things that will make the garden run smoothly,” she says.  She is also using the funds to create materials for nutrition classes and cooking demonstrations at the garden and farm stand, as well as to purchase a commercial hot plate and rain barrels.

Summer 2017 marks the third year of Holmes providing jobs for 20 young people ages 14 to 24 through the Summer Youth Gardening Training Program. In partnership with Youth Opportunity Unlimited, program participants learn about urban agriculture, nutrition, professional development, and skills they can use to start a garden in their own community. In her words:

“I feed them, I teach them, I have them create vision boards. I ask them: ‘Where do you want to see yourself in three years? Where do you want to go to college?’ They’re learning about food and where it comes from, and entrepreneurship skills. It’s a safe place for them, an outlet. This is hard work. Some of these kids have never seen a seed before. Seems so simple. But they'd never seen it before. Kale, eggplant, squash...most of the kids never ate any of these vegetables.”


Through partnership with the Greater Cleveland Food Bank, Holmes provides free breakfast and lunch to participants in the summer jobs program as well; she’s also been known to provide work for additional youth from the neighborhood. She explains, “I saw kids coming to work hungry, not having lunch. I reached out to [U.S. Representative] Marcia Fudge, and she said, ‘I'm going to help you,’ and then reached out to Farm Credit of Mid- America, which provided funding for a cabin and refrigerator. Following that investment, I partnered with the Food Bank. Now, they send a truck full of lunches that we give out to kids over the summer.”

Holmes also has a very important helper in the garden. “My grandson, Alonzo, is seven years old, and he’s been with me in the garden since he was three. He helps with the soil, mulch, locking up the place; he’s my little assistant.”

When asked what inspires her, Holmes responds: “It's more than farming and gardening for me. It's about taking over our neighborhood and introducing healthy food to our children and adults. I'm here not to just grow and sell vegetables; I'm here to teach the community entrepreneurship, how to eat healthy foods, and the importance of cleaning their neighborhood. I'm teaching them to love themselves and not to let anyone ruin their day…Urban farming is about bringing the community together, reducing crime, helping neighbors feel comfortable coming outside. I do street clean ups, and I’m in charge of the kids’ park across the street.”

As for what’s next for Holmes?

“So many people want to partner, but I need capacity. Now, with nonprofit status, I could partner with the city on things like a re-entry program. Things are going so great with the business. I'm outgrowing my home…I’m going to need an office space or a small building!”

*The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the position of The Healthy Food Access Portal.

Grassroots Guide to Federal Farm and Food Programs

Overview

Developed by the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition, this guide offers an overview of federal programs and policies most important to sustainable agriculture and how they can be used by farmers, ranchers, and grassroots organizations nationwide.The guide also contains dozens of competitive grant programs intended to help grassroots organizations better serve communities and farmers.

Marketing for Food Hubs

Overview

This website serves as a resource hub and academic paper on the role of food hubs in marketing to the end-user, including:

  • Customizable marketing flyer templates
  • Best practices for print and social media marketing (with links to other useful resources)
  • Inspirational examples from food hubs doing a great job
  • Academic hybrid paper, with both a) research on the history and future potential of food hubs, and b) actionable recommendations for food hubs to help their customers market products and maintain source-identification to the end-user consumer.

March 2017

Colorado Enterprise Fund: Improving Food System through Healthy Food Financing to Small Businesses

Overview

This profile by Reinvestment Fund highlights Colorado Enterprise Fund’s experience building its healthy food financing portfolio to provide insights for other CDFIs engaged in this work across the nation.

August 2010

Getting to Market: Supermarket Access in Lower Income Areas

Overview

The Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program and The Reinvestment Fund (TRF) performed a detailed analysis of supermarket access in 10 metropolitan areas, and the results are discussed in a new video, “Getting to Market.” Results from the analysis encourage users to view the locations of, and generate reports about, low-supermarket-access communities within the 10 metropolitan areas.

Building Success of Food Hubs Through the Cooperative Experience

Overview

This report focuses on the experiences of four cooperatives in New York and Pennsylvania in aggregating, marketing, and distributing produce on behalf of their members.

June 2017

Treasure Coast Food Bank

Overview

Based on market analysis and research provided by Reinvestment Fund, Florida Community Loan Fund developed a strategy described as a “supermarket plus” model of fresh food financing where food retail is a piece of a larger strategy focused on food security and healthy eating. This brief profile is an example of this FCLF strategy in action through a partnership with Treasure Coast Food Bank to expand its ability to distribute and process fresh fruits and vegetables.

June 2017

U.S. Veterans Serve at Home by Combating Food Deserts

Overview

The shuttering of three area Walmart stores forced residents in a 44 square mile swath of southwest Wichita, Kansas to live in a food desert. However through the partnership and support of the CDFI Fund, Enterprise Community Loan Fund and veteran-owned business Honor Capital, low-income families again have access to healthy food options and locally-driven economic opportunity.

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