USDA Agricultural
Marketing Service is developing three new local food directories that will
expand USDA's support for local and regional foods: a National
Community-Supported Agriculture (CSA) Enterprise Directory, a National
Food Hub Directory, and a National On-Farm Market Directory.
The USDA National Farmers Market Directory,
available at farmersmarkets.usda.gov, provides
information about U.S. farmers’ market locations, directions, operating times,
product offerings, and much more. The data is collected via voluntary
self-reporting by operating farmers’ market managers and is searchable by zip
code, product mix, and other criteria. The National Farmers Market Directory
receives over two million hits annually.
In addition to USDA's National Farmers Market
Directory, AMS is adding:
USDA's National
Community-Supported Agriculture (CSA) Enterprise Directory - A CSA is a farm or
network/association of multiple farms that offer consumers regular deliveries
of locally-grown farm products during one or more harvest season(s) on a
subscription or membership basis.
USDA's National Food Hub
Directory - A Food Hub is a
business or organization that actively manages the aggregation, distribution,
and marketing of source-identified food products to multiple buyers from
multiple producers, primarily local and regional producers, to strengthen the
ability of these producers to satisfy local and regional wholesale, retail, and
institutional demand.
USDA's National On-Farm
Market Directory - An On-Farm
Market is a farm market managed by a single farm operator that sells
agricultural and/or horticultural products directly to consumers from a
location on their farm property or on property adjacent to that farm.
USDA invites local food business owners who fall
within these categories to list their operational details in the new
directories www.usdalocalfooddirectories.com. These new directories will be
available online early in 2015, giving potential customers, business partners,
and community planners easy, one-stop access to the most current information
about different sources of local foods.
2014 Directory Highlights
According to USDA's 2014
National Farmers Market Directory, the states with the most farmers markets
reported are California (764 markets), New York (638 markets), Michigan (339
markets), Ohio (311 markets), Illinois (309 markets), Massachusetts (306 markets),
Pennsylvania (297 markets), Wisconsin (295 markets), Virginia (249 markets),
and Missouri (245 markets). All
geographic regions saw increases in their market listings, with the most growth
in the South. The 10 states with the biggest increases in the numbers of
farmers markets include Tennessee, Louisiana, Texas, Hawaii, Massachusetts,
Arkansas, North Carolina, Montana, Florida and Nebraska. Five of these states –
Tennessee, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, and North Carolina – are part of USDA's
StrikeForce for Rural Growth and Opportunity, where USDA has increased
investment in rural communities through intensive outreach and stronger
partnerships.
Farmers’ market development is a cornerstone of USDA's Know Your Farmer, Know Your
Food Initiative, which coordinates the Department's policy,
resources, and outreach efforts related to local and regional food systems.
Secretary Vilsack has identified strengthening local food systems as one of the
four pillars of USDA's commitment to rural economic development.
USDA invites local food
business owners to list their operational details at www.usdalocalfooddirectories.com.
The new directories will be available online early in 2015.
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