Springfield Community Gardens awarded $375K grant from USDA

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Springfield Community Gardens (SCG) is pleased to announce that after a highly competitive national selection process, it has been awarded $375,000 in funding through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) Community Food Projects Competitive Grant Program.

The USDA NIFA funding is authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill to develop local and self-reliant food systems, such as farm to table enterprises that bring nutritious food to low-income communities. The funding will expand SCG’s ongoing efforts to improve access to fresh, local food in Springfield City Council Zone 1.

About the project

This project aims to create a local food hub that empowers low-income individuals to reduce food insecurity while also enabling them with education and skills to generate their own means for financial security.
Collaborative community organizations include the Drew Lewis Foundation, Missouri State University, Ozarks Food Harvest, Springfield Victory Mission and the University of Missouri Extension. They have committed to supporting this “farm to table” system that develops the capacity needed to grow, process and distribute locally grown food and products.
“The Ozarks has a long history of self-reliance and building community by growing and preserving our own food,” SCG’s Co-founder and Executive Director Maile Auterson said. “This generous grant will assist our community in its efforts to revitalize those systems, especially in Zone 1.”
The effort to submit this grant was made possible in part by support from Missouri Foundation for Health.
Since 1996, NIFA’s Community Food Projects have awarded approximately $101 million to organizations nationwide.
“These NIFA investments help communities develop field to fork food systems that provide long-term community solutions,” NIFA Director Sonny Ramaswamy said.

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