It’s Grant Season! Read about these potential grants and see if
you, your farm, or your farm group/association are eligible.
"Increasing market
opportunities for local food producers is a sound investment in America's rural
economies, while also increasing access to healthy food for our nation's
families," Vilsack said. "Consumer demand for local, healthy food is
skyrocketing in schools, hospitals and wholesalers. These grant opportunities
allow farmers and ranchers to meet this demand, and feed our nation's kids."
The grant programs administered by
the Agricultural Marketing Service
(AMS) include the Specialty Crop Block
Grant Program (SCBGP), the Federal-State
Marketing Improvement Program (FSMIP) and the Farmers Market and Local Food
Promotion Program which covers two types of grants: the Farmers Market Promotion Program (FMPP) and the Local Food Promotion Program (LFPP).
Also included in the announcement is the USDA's Food and Nutrition Service
(FNS) Farm to School Grant Program,
designed to bring local foods into the school cafeteria. USDA's Farm Service Agency
implements the NAP program, which has been expanded to better protect specialty
crop and other eligible producers from losses due to natural disasters.
"American farmers and ranchers
feed the nation. These grant programs provide vital support to specialty crop
producers, whose fruits and vegetables fill over half of the MyPlate
recommendations," said Agricultural Marketing Service Administrator Anne
Alonzo. "They also support local and regional food systems that are
meeting consumer demand and creating economic opportunities in rural and urban
communities around the country."
Over $63.2 million in SCBGP grants
are allocated to U.S. States and territories based on a formula that considers
both specialty crop acreage and production value. Interested applicants should
apply directly through their State department of agriculture. A listing of
state contacts and application due dates can be found at www.ams.usda.gov/scbgp.
The FSMIP provides $1 million in
matching funds to State departments of agriculture, state colleges and
universities, and other appropriate state agencies. Funds will support research
projects that address challenges and opportunities in marketing, transporting,
and distributing U.S. agricultural products domestically and internationally.
The Farmers Market and Local Food
Promotion Program provides a combined total of $26.6 million divided equally
between its two grant programs. The FMPP provides $13.3 million to support
projects for direct farmer-to-consumer marketing projects such as farmers
markets, community-supported agriculture programs, roadside stands, and
agritourism. The LFPP offers $13.3 million in funds for projects that support
intermediary supply chain activities for businesses that process, distribute,
aggregate, and store locally- or regionally-produced food products.
Grant applications for FSMIP, FMPP
and LFPP must be submitted electronically through www.Grants.gov by 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time on May 14, 2015. Applicants should start the Grants.gov
registration process as soon as possible to ensure that they meet the deadline.
AMS will host a webinar on March
25, 2015, to introduce FMPP and LFPP to potential applicants and a
teleconference about FSMIP on March 31, 2015. For more information about SCBGP,
FSMIP, FMPP, and LFPP, including program background and webinar information,
visit the AMS grants website: http://www.ams.usda.gov/AMSgrants.
With $6 million in funding
available, four different types of USDA Farm to School grants are available.
Planning grants help schools get started, while implementation grants enable
schools to expand existing programs. Support service grants allow community partners
such as non-profit entities, Indian tribal nations, state and local agencies,
and agriculture producers to provide broad reaching support to schools in their
efforts to bring local products into the cafeteria. Training grants are used to
disseminate best practices and spread strategies known to succeed. Proposals
for planning, implementation, and support service grants are due by 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time, May 20, 2015. Letters of intent for training grants are due by
11:59 p.m. Eastern Time, April 30, 2015.
More information about the Farm to
School grant program, upcoming webinars relevant to applicants, and sample
grant applications can be found at: http://www.fns.usda.gov/farmtoschool/farm-school-grant-program.
These programs are key elements of
the USDA's Know Your Food, Know Your Farmer initiative which coordinates the
Department's support for local and regional food systems. The Secretary has
identified local and regional food systems as one of the four pillars of rural
economic development.
- The 2012 Census of
Agriculture indicates that more than 160,000 farmers and ranchers
nationwide are tapping into growing consumer demand by selling their
products locally. This segment of agriculture is a vibrant growth area
that is drawing young people back to rural communities, generating jobs
and improving quality of life in rural communities.
- In FY13-14, USDA made
over 500 infrastructure investments that create new markets for local
food- including food hubs, scale-appropriate processing, and distribution
networks - that are connecting farmers and ranchers with new sources of
revenue and creating jobs.
- Since the program began in 2012, USDA's Farm to School program has funded 221 projects in 49 states, the District of Columbia, and the Virgin Islands. According to the USDA's Farm to School Census, schools spent over $385 million on local food purchases during the 2011-2012 school year.
USDA
has expanded access to healthy foods in underserved communities by making EBT
available at farmers markets. Over 5,000 farmers markets now accept EBT, and
SNAP redemption at farmers markets nationwide rose from $4 million in 2009 to
over $18 million in 2014.
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