Innovative projects to address healthy food access
Innovative projects to address healthy food access
- David Lee, Board of Directors
Earlier this month, we opened our fourth store in Mequon. It was a really exciting day for the Outpost community and for the many Outpost owners in Mequon, many of whom had been travelling all the way down to Capitol Drive to shop.
The new store is a thing of beauty - sustainable in form and function - and if you haven’t been up there, you really ought to take a trip. Last year was my first year on the board, and most of the important decisions we made last year had to do with the Mequon store. It was amazing to see all of it come into fruition.
In addition to the excitement of having a gem of a new location, I think it also better positions us to begin tackling our High-Five, which as you may know, are the five pillars with which we measure our long-term success.
Number one in our High-Five is core to our business purpose: Lively Neighborhood Markets. In this objective, we are committed to addressing the lack of healthy food access in at least two Milwaukee neighborhoods. This is really exciting and it has me thinking about the opening of Fare & Square in Chester, Pennsylvania last fall.
Billed as the nation’s first non-profit supermarket, Fare & Square is a $7 million dollar, 16,000 square foot supermarket that was opened by Philabundance, a food bank in Philadelphia, and a group of local and national partners including the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the Delaware Valley Regional Economic Development Corporation, and many others (Full disclosure, I work for Feeding America, the national organization of food banks, of which Philabundance is a Member. But I had nothing to do with this project).
Fare & Square provides the residents of Chester, PA with its first full-service supermarket since 2001, featuring competitive prices and a target of 10% below cost on some items.
Structurally, it functions like a food co-op: it offers a free membership program, and if a family qualifies by having a low-income, the membership also unlocks a 7 percent credit based on what they buy that they can use on future purchases. Since its opening last fall, it has grown to over 7,000 members. The store’s 45 employees were all hired locally, providing jobs for people in the community. Whenever possible they purchase from local vendors.
It remains to be seen whether the model proves to be sustainable. With the razor thin margins in the grocery industry, it’ll be interesting to see whether a non-profit can succeed where a for-profit market failed (the property that houses Fare & Square was the site of Chester’s last supermarket). There is food purchasing power in the area since residents of Chester had to buy food from somewhere prior to Fare & Square’s opening. Since there was no market, all of that purchasing power, upwards of perhaps $10 million, had been diverted to supermarkets outside of the county.
Ultimately, this model and structure may not be the right solution for Milwaukee and Outpost. I only highlight it as an example of the many innovative social enterprises happening across the country to address healthy food access.
There are a multitude of different organizations working on projects of differing size and scale to address low-income healthy food access. Starting small, some food co-ops have low-income memberships. Other organizations, like our own Walnut Way, are working on healthy corner stores. Still others are partnering youth with community organizations to start urban farm stands. This is a really exciting time to be in the social enterprise of food.
As Outpost begins to explore and plan for addressing healthy food access in our city, what are some innovative ideas that you have seen and heard about?
Comments
Bloggers
Archived Columns
Tags
Archives
-
April 2024 (1)
March 2024 (1)
February 2024 (1)
December 2023 (1)
August 2023 (1)
March 2023 (1)
February 2023 (1)
November 2021 (1)
September 2021 (1)
November 2020 (1)
October 2020 (1)
July 2020 (1)
June 2020 (1)
May 2020 (1)
February 2020 (1)
January 2020 (1)
December 2019 (1)
November 2019 (1)
October 2019 (1)
August 2019 (2)
May 2019 (1)
March 2019 (2)
January 2019 (1)
December 2018 (1)
November 2018 (1)
October 2018 (2)
September 2018 (1)
February 2018 (1)
November 2017 (2)
October 2017 (1)
July 2017 (2)
March 2017 (1)
February 2017 (1)
January 2017 (1)
December 2016 (2)
November 2016 (1)
August 2016 (2)
July 2016 (2)
March 2016 (2)
February 2016 (2)
January 2016 (1)
December 2015 (1)
October 2015 (3)
August 2015 (1)
July 2015 (2)
June 2015 (1)
March 2015 (2)
February 2015 (2)
January 2015 (2)
December 2014 (2)
November 2014 (1)
October 2014 (3)
August 2014 (2)
July 2014 (1)
June 2014 (2)
May 2014 (2)
April 2014 (1)
March 2014 (2)
February 2014 (2)
January 2014 (2)
December 2013 (1)
November 2013 (2)
October 2013 (1)
July 2013 (2)
June 2013 (1)
May 2013 (2)
April 2013 (1)
March 2013 (2)
February 2013 (1)
January 2013 (2)
December 2012 (3)
November 2012 (1)
October 2012 (3)
September 2012 (2)
August 2012 (4)
July 2012 (4)
June 2012 (6)
May 2012 (3)
April 2012 (4)
March 2012 (6)
February 2012 (8)
January 2012 (3)
December 2011 (4)
October 2011 (4)
September 2011 (3)
August 2011 (5)
July 2011 (7)
June 2011 (1)
May 2011 (2)
April 2011 (7)
March 2011 (10)
February 2011 (12)
January 2011 (11)
December 2010 (19)
November 2010 (13)
October 2010 (22)
September 2010 (16)
August 2010 (24)
July 2010 (33)
June 2010 (5)
May 2010 (52)
April 2010 (37)
March 2010 (55)
February 2010 (44)
January 2010 (46)
December 2009 (40)
November 2009 (26)
October 2009 (37)
September 2009 (34)
August 2009 (24)
July 2009 (21)
June 2009 (29)
May 2009 (30)
April 2009 (33)
March 2009 (16)
February 2009 (2)
January 2009 (5)
November 2008 (1)
October 2008 (1)
September 2008 (2)
August 2008 (3)
July 2008 (2)
June 2008 (6)
May 2008 (2)
April 2008 (10)
March 2008 (5)
February 2008 (5)
January 2008 (12)
December 2007 (5)
October 2007 (3)
August 2007 (3)
July 2007 (1)
June 2007 (5)
May 2007 (4)
April 2007 (6)
March 2007 (3)
February 2007 (3)
January 2007 (4)
December 2006 (2)
October 2006 (2)
September 2006 (5)
August 2006 (8)
0 (1)