Innovative Food Model
As part of the Healthy Food Access initiative, the organizations below were chosen to implement innovative, creative, alternative, or strategic models that will expand healthy food access for low-income city residents.
Given the various barriers to healthy food that currently exists, solutions need to be multipronged. The proposals submitted for the RFP Request in Agust 2023, build on local assets such as the Rochester Public Market, local farmers and food-based entrepreneurs, existing local business support, innovative non-profits, and other resources.
Organization
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Project Summary
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Intended Outcomes
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Cornell Cooperative Extension - Monroe County
Requested amount:
$126,577.00
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Expanding a workforce development and food security program entitled “GROWS in the City,” CCE Monroe will create an urban farm on Remington Street with approximately 1,980 sq. ft. of growing space. The urban farm will serve as an expansion site for CCE Monroe’s transitional jobs program, Gaining Relevant and Outstanding Work Skills (GROWS), for unemployed young adults in the city. The program will also include monthly nutrition/cooking classes facilitated by CCE’s Monroe Snap-Ed Nutrition Educators.
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Taproot Collective
Requested amount:
$373,989.69
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This project will create a new full-time position dedicated to providing capacity-building material, technical, and logistical support to community gardens and urban farms in low-income and food-insecure Rochester neighborhoods. The main vehicle for these services is Taproot’s free membership program for urban growers, known as the Collective. In collaboration with their Community Food Team youth workforce development program, the program will result in direct investment in at least 40 community gardens and urban farms, supporting as many as 1,800 low-income households.
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St. Peter’s Kitchen
Requested amount:
$390,000.00
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This project is multifaceted and builds on the core competencies of St. Peter’s Kitchen and existing partnerships with Foodlink, Wegmans, Tops and Bimbo Bakery. It will increase access and effectiveness of current services and aims to increase the reach of the hot meal program by adding a Saturday lunch option and continuing to provide low-cost meals to Project Haven.
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Foodlink
Requested amount:
$573,804.00
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Foodlink’s Curbside Market is the largest alternative food retailer in Rochester. This project requests funding to expand the number of locations the Curbside Market can visit. It would also enable online ordering, including for SNAP and WIC customers. Foodlink would also use project funding to update a pre-pandemic study it conducted on the feasibility of a social purpose grocery store with 2025 data.
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Field & Fork Network
Requested amount:
$879,243.42
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This project seeks to expand Double Up Food Bucks NY (DUFBNY), a SNAP-match nutrition incentive program operating across Upstate NY and Long Island, by providing a dollar-for-dollar match on SNAP benefits used to purchase frozen fruits and vegetables. This includes Abundance Co-op and three Tops Markets locations.
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Trillium Health
Requested amount:
$999,631.00
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This proposal requests funding for a food pharmacy pilot program with the creation of two new Trillium Health positions—a Nutrition Health Educator and a Supervisor of Food Services. The food pharmacy medical providers and other essential TH staff will refer food insecure community members to the TH Food Pantry. Supplemental education will be accessible for TH patients with diet-related chronic diseases.
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Total
$3,343,245.11
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