Saturday, January 11, 2025

Search

Farmers Markets Increase Access to Fresh Food

Rhea Landholm.

By Rhea Landholm

There is nothing better than slicing up a ripe garden tomato fresh off the vine. However, some may not have the means to grow fresh vegetables in their backyards.
At the Center for Rural Affairs, we work with rural communities to build healthy, sustainable, local food systems. That includes supporting farmers markets.
Farmers markets expand access to fresh, healthy food in communities that need it most. They provide affordable, competitive prices for low-income families, and many accept food vouchers.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), more than 5,000 farmers markets across the country accept Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, with the number of new locations increasing at an average of 40 percent per year.
Vendors are reaping the benefits. In 2014, 362,477 SNAP households made at least one purchase at a farmers market, according to the National Farmers Market Coalition. That means more families are eating healthy and fresh local fruits and vegetables.
Farmers markets also provide beginning farmers a low-cost way to enter the marketplace and grow their businesses. Small and medium existing farms can supplement their revenue by selling at markets, supporting the sustainability of family farms.
The USDA reported 8,675 markets in the country in 2016, up from 2,863 in 2000. Many consumers now have the opportunity to eat food grown within a few miles of their homes. And, that money stays in their small towns, helping local economies.
Find your farmers market in USDA’s national directory at www.ams.usda.gov.
ED. NOTE: Rhea Landholm is brand marketing and communications manager for the Center for Rural Affairs. Established in 1973, the Center for Rural Affairs is a private, non-profit organization working to strengthen small businesses, family farms and ranches, and rural communities through action oriented programs addressing social, economic, and environmental issues.

Spout Off

Cape May County – I’d like to suggest to the Herald that they leverage spout offs draw and replace some of the ads for their paper with a few paid ads that you probably can charge a little extra for. Lots of people…

Read More

Lower Township – West Cape May – Blaming DEI for the California wildfires is classic Trumper behavior? Not blaming DEI is classic liberal overdose behavior. What’s your point? Just like most liberals you add no…

Read More

Cape May County – I just love some of the liberal commenters that always ask after a spout that they don’t underside does this spout have a point. It does but perhaps liberalizing our education system prevented you…

Read More

Most Read

Print Editions

Recommended Articles

Skip to content