Helping Farmers Markets Grow

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Oh the fires. It’s terrifying to watch them unfold especially viewing from videos taken with hand-held phones with calm narration from the very folks who are seeing their place burn up.

There has been natural (and unnatural) disasters in my own place more than once and so I have a bit of an out of body sensation watching those videos, having made a few myself. Soon will come the overwhelming finality of knowing how many beings have been lost, how many have lost home, how long it will take just to not see or smell the destruction. (I remember driving through Montpelier VT after their devastating flood not that long ago, smelling the musty items out on the curb to be tossed in the trash, and how the years-old Katrina memories came rushing back.)

Once the people are back, there will be a period of exuberance when they are able to stand there, to see each other, and to talk it out. That period lasts for a few months while more come back, while they clean out their places…Then it’s on to other phases, some less pleasant, all of which last years and are much longer lasting than the attention from media or even the kind questions from folks from other places.

I must confess that I only realized a few years back that I have yet to “land” anywhere since the loss of my place in 2005, and have come to see that I cannot seem to trust in the idea of a constant home yet. Instead, I do my best to make that home in many places, and to find small comforts that travel with me.

And yes since this is a blog for market communities, I gratefully include those markets as spaces where I feel less alone, less “on the road.” But its not just the market spaces; it’s also the community of market people who call or email or meet up with me to spend a few minutes or longer, recounting recent experiences or pulling out a shared memory to laugh or to mourn over or ask for my update, listening attentively while I do.

That is the real magic of this work we do: that we create comfort and belonging which doesn’t always live in a physical space, but is carried by a shared belief that showing up, by seeing people as more valuable than just the sum of their transactional history, by pushing against the cynicism of faster and cheaper as better, by looking people in the eye to ask how they are and waiting for an answer, by including everyone, we belong to the comforting.

Our friends in Los Angeles will need that, just as friends everywhere who have lost already have needed that.

That is a huge part of why the work we do is constantly vital even when the markets are closed and market leaders are back to their planning, and our producers are back on the land, and in their kitchens with their recipes and in their fields with their animals…

Sustained community. That’s the magic.

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  1. Leigh Sloss-Corra's avatar

    Having spent the past 3 days focused on the fires in Pasadena/Altadena where my daughter and friends live and have been displaced – some having experienced total losses, I am hearing and digesting your words and so grateful again for your insights, Dar. Memories and the impact of Katrina and so many other wretched events are still right here with us. Recovery will take years, if that’s even possible. Keep writing and sharing. Know that whenever you are near, you will always have a landing spot here. xo Leigh

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    posted 01/10/2025 at 12:28 pm by Leigh Sloss-Corra Reply

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01/10/2025
DW
civic engagement, climate change, disaster planning, environmental issues, farmers markets, social capital, social cohesion
disaster, farmers markets, Los Angeles, New Orleans

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FMC
Market Winter

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Helping Public Markets Grow 2011-2021

Independent Researcher and Analyst list of contracts (In November 2019 began full-time role as FMC’s Program Director)

•AMS TA project: Mentor for national technical assistance project for current FMLFPP grantees led by the Northeast Regional Center for Rural Development at Penn State University.
•Brooklyn NYC: Assisted BDPHO with developing farmers market technical assistance programs.
•Report on BDPHO’s 5-year market capacity project.
•Farmers Market Coalition Senior Research Associate for Farmers Market Metrics project creation (2015-)

• Farmers Market Coalition’s Senior Advisor, focusing on technical assistance for markets and networks (2015-)
•Illinois: Worked with ILFMA on evaluation plan for integration and upgrade of statewide fms and DTC information on integrated platforms.
•Louisiana: Assisted students at Southeastern University in Hammond with food system research and farmers market strategy.
•Louisiana: Assisted ReFresh Market and Garden with evaluation plan (2017)
•Louisiana: Working with Ruston Farmers Market on outreach strategy for new location

• Helping to craft resources and training for 2019 Fresh Central Certified Institute for Central Louisiana markets and producers with CLEDA.

•Louisiana: Organized first statewide farmers market conference for LSU Ag Center archives found at: lafarmersmarkets dot blogspot dot com

•Maine: Researched farmers market job descriptions found at www.helpingpublicmarketsgrow.com

• Mississippi: Providing research and analysis for City of Hernando MS 3-year project to grow flagship market

•Mississippi: Assisted Gulf Coast markets with FMPP project on analyzing access to markets for Gulfport resident and farmers. 2014 Local Food Awareness Report for Gulfport MS, found at www.helpingpublicmarketsgrow.com

•Vermont: Providing analysis and resource development for NOFA-VT’s annual data on farmers markets.

•Supporting markets creating their Legacy Binders
•Vermont: Researched and wrote report on SNAP, FMNP technology and policy answers for VT farmers markets in collaboration with NOFA-VT and VAAFM, 2013 Vermont Market Currency Feasibility Report found at www.helpingpublicmarketsgrow.com
•Vermont: Working with Vermont Law School on legal resources for farmers and market organizations.

•Vermont: Assisting with 3 year project to build capacity for direct marketing farmers and outlets through DIY data collection and use.

Wallace Center: Moderator of FSLN, advisory to the 2020 NGFN Conference to be held in New Orleans in March of 2020

•Why Hunger: Created online toolkit for grassroots communities.

Feel free to contact me at my name at gmail dot com if I might be able to help your market or business.
Thanks
Dar Wolnik

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