Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Total Revenue
▼$188.1K
Total Contributions
$3,810
Total Expenses
▼$215.2K
Total Assets
$79.7K
Total Liabilities
▼$2,273
Net Assets
$77.4K
Officer Compensation
→$0
Other Salaries
$157.1K
Investment Income
▼$32
Fundraising
▼$0
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
Total Federal Funding
$1.4M
Awards Found
8
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Agriculture | LED BY GROWING PLACES, THE LOCAL FOOD WORKS IN NORTH CENTRAL MA LOCAL FOOD PROMOTION PROGRAM PROJECT BUILDS ON FIVE YEARS OF PLANNING AND ASSESSMENT TO CREATE AN EQUITABLE, SUSTAINABLE, AND ACCESSIBLE NORTH CENTRAL MA (NCMA) FOOD SYSTEM THAT CAN SUPPORT THE REGIONS 200 SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZED FARMS, ADDRESS HIGH RATES OF FOOD INSECURITY AND NUTRITION RELATED CHRONIC DISEASES, AND STRENGTHEN THE LOCAL ECONOMY VIA A REGIONAL FOOD VALUE CHAIN. THE PROJECT IS FOUNDED ON A NCMA FOOD SYSTEM FEASIBILITY STUDY, REGIONAL FOOD CENTER OPERATING MODEL AND BUSINESS PLAN, AND STRATEGIC PLAN THAT WERE DEVELOPED WITH INPUT FROM 130 DIVERSE COMMUNITY PARTNERS THAT COMPRISE THE LOCAL FOOD WORKS-NCMA COALITION. KEY PROJECT ACTIVITIES SEEK TO 1) BUILD A ROBUST MID-TIER VALUE CHAIN THROUGH A NEW REGIONAL FOOD PROCESSING CENTER 2) SUPPORT LOCAL FARMERS AND SMALL FOOD BUSINESSES TO EXPAND TO NEW MARKET CHANNELS AND 3) DEVELOP A COORDINATED AND ACCESSIBLE MARKETING AND PROMOTION SYSTEM WITH SUPPORTIVE PURCHASING TECHNOLOGY. AS A RESULT OF PROJECT ACTIVITIES, PRIMARY PROJECT DELIVERABLES AND OUTCOMES DURING THE GRANT PERIOD INCLUDE:10 NEW MARKET CHANNELS 65 MARKET ACCESS POINTS PARTICIPATING IN LOCAL FOOD WORKS REGIONAL FOOD CENTERS (LFW-RFC) DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM45 NCMA FARMERS REACH NEW MARKET CHANNELS THROUGH THE LFW-RFC15 SMALL FOOD BUSINESS MICROENTERPRISES REACH NEW MARKET CHANNELS THROUGH THE LFW-RFC AND SUPPORT THE CENTERS GROWTH VIA KITCHEN RENTALS FOR PRODUCT PRODUCTION2,370 CONSUMERS PURCHASE RECEIVE LOCALLY PRODUCED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS FROM THE LFW-RFC GENERATING AN ADDITIONAL 753,131 IN SALES71 FOOD AND AGRICULTURE JOBS CREATED OR MAINTAINED BECAUSE OF THE LFW-RFC IN ADDITION TO SHORT- AND MEDIUM-TERM OUTCOMES, THE PROJECT WILL BOLSTER THE NCMA FOOD SYSTEM TO STRENGTHEN THE LOCAL FOOD ECONOMY, INCREASE EQUITABLE HEALTHY FOOD ACCESS FOR HOUSEHOLDS THAT SUFFER FROM DISPROPORTIONATE RATES OF NUTRITION RELATED CHRONIC DISEASES, AND IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF LIFE OF NCMA FARMERS AND SMALL FOOD BUSINESSES. THE THREE MAIN PRIMARY BENEFICIARIES OF THIS PROJECT OTHER THAT GROWING PLACES WHO SERVES AS THE MID-TIER ENTERPRISE ARE NCMA FARMERS FOCUSING ON THOSE WHO ARE SMALL AND HISTORICALLY UNDERSERVED SMALL FOOD BUSINESSES AND CONSUMERS FOCUSING ON THOSE WHO ARE FOOD INSECURE ALTHOUGH ALL WILL BENEFIT. EACH WILL ACHIEVE SHORT TERM BENEFITS RELATED TO KNOWLEDGE, AWARENESS, SKILLS, AND ACCESS AS WELL AS LONG-TERM BENEFITS RELATED TO FINANCIAL GAINS SAVINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS IN HEALTH AND QUALITY OF LIFE. TO ACHIEVE PROJECT OBJECTIVES, LOCAL FOOD WORKS IN NORTH CENTRAL MA IS CENTERED ON COMMUNITY COLLABORATION AND COLLECTIVE IMPACT THROUGH THE LOCAL FOOD WORKS STEERING COMMITTEE AND BROADER COALITION. TOWARDS THIS END, THE PROJECT ENGAGES FARMER-BASED ORGANIZATIONS (CENTRAL MASS GROWN AND THE MONTACHUSETT AGRICULTURAL ALLIANCE) TO RECRUIT AND EMBED A STRONG FARMERS VOICE WITHIN ALL PROJECT ACTIVITIES HEAL, A YOUTH AND RESIDENT DRIVEN COALITION FOCUSED ON ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT AND HEALTHY FOOD ACCESS THAT WILL SUPPORT CONSUMER AND SMALL FOOD BUSINESS ENGAGEMENT THE NORTH CENTRAL MA HEALTH EQUITY PARTNERSHIP (CHNA9) TO ENGAGE NCMAS ANCHOR INSTITUTIONS TO BUY LOCAL VIA ITS ANCHOR COLLABORATIVE THE UNITED WAY OF NORTH CENTRAL MA TO RECRUIT LOCAL FOOD PANTRIES TO INCREASE LOCAL PURCHASING FROM THE LFW-RFC THE NORTH CENTRAL MA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE TO PROMOTE THE PROJECT TO LOCAL FOOD BUYERS AND ENTREPRENEURS LOCAL SCHOOLS, COLLEGES AND HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS TO SUPPORT LOCAL PURCHASING AT THE INSTITUTIONAL AND CONSUMER LEVELS AND NCMA MUNICIPALITIES AND THE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION TO PROMOTE THE PROJECT AND LEVERAGE RESOURCES FOR THE REGIONAL FOOD CENTERS CONTINUED GROWTH AND EXPANSION. ALSO SUPPORTING THE PROJECT ARE CONSULTANTS WITH EXPERTISE IN FOOD SAFETY, PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT, AND COMMUNICATION WHO WILL BUILD CAPACITY OF PARTNERS TO CREATE A SUSTAINABLE NCMA FOOD VALUE CHAIN. | $699.7K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | IN ITS 27-TOWN FOOTPRINT,NORTH CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS (NCMA) HOSTS 250+ FARMS,WITH MOST IDENTIFYING AS SMALL OR MEDIUM IN SIZE. HOWEVER,AGRICULTURE ONLY COMPRISES ABOUT 2% OF THE REGION'S TOTAL EMPLOYMENT,AND RESIDENTS ARE AMONG THE UNHEALTHIEST IN THE STATE. REPRESENTING DIVERSE SECTORS OF THE FOOD SYSTEM,THE NORTH CENTRAL MA FOOD SYSTEM PARTNERSHIP HAS BEEN BUILDING MOMENTUM OVER TWO YEARS TO CREATE A SUSTAINABLE AND RESILIENT LOCAL FOOD SYSTEM. DURING ITS DEVELOPMENT,COVID-19 FORCED THE REGION TO MOVE LOCAL FOOD THROUGH NEW CHANNELS TO KEEP THE FOOD SYSTEM VIABLE. THIS FURTHER INCREASED AWARENESS ABOUT NCMA'S UNTAPPED POTENTIAL AND LAID A SOLID FOUNDATION FOR THE PARTNERSHIP TO BUILD FROM. CONSEQUENTLY,THE NORTH CENTRAL MA FOOD SYSTEM PARTNERSHIP IS POISED TO CREATE A VIBRANT LOCAL FOOD ECONOMY AND IMPROVE THE HEALTH OF RESIDENTS. OVER THE NEXT TWO YEARS,THEY WILL CONDUCT A COMPREHENSIVE PLANNING PROCESS TO CREATE A SUSTAINABLE AND RESILIENT NCMA FOOD VALUE CHAIN AND BUSINESS MODEL.KEY ACTIVITIES THAT WILL HELP ACHIEVE PARTNERSHIP GOALS INCLUDE A STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS VIA A STRENGTHS,OPPORTUNITIES,ASPIRATIONS,RESULTS 'SOAR' ANALYSIS TO FORMALIZE THE PARTNERSHIP'S VISION,MISSION,VALUES,GOALS ,MEMBERSHIP,AND STRUCTURE; A FEASIBILITY STUDY TO DEVELOP AN OPERATING AND BUSINESS PLAN FOR A REGIONAL FOOD CAMPUS; DEVELOPMENT OF A RESOURCE LIBRARY WITH AVAILABLE FUNDING,TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE,AND EVIDENCE-BASED INFORMATION TO HELP GROW THE FOOD CAMPUS; AND THE ACTIVATION OF A BI-DIRECTIONAL COMMUNICATION NETWORK TO CONNECT DIVERSE SECTORS WITHIN THE NCMA FOOD SYSTEM. | $249.4K | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Oct 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | GROW GETTERS: NEXT-GEN URBAN FARMER TRAINING PROGRAM | $187.4K | FY2022 | Jul 2022 – Dec 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | CN FARM TO SCHOOL GRANT | $99.9K | FY2024 | Jul 2024 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | CN FARM TO SCHOOL SUPPLEMENTAL | $48.6K | FY2022 | Jul 2022 – Dec 2023 |
| Environmental Protection Agency | DESCRIPTION:THE PURPOSE OF THIS COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT IS TO PROVIDE FUNDING TO GROWING PLACES PROPOSES LOCAL FOOD WORKS-CLOSING THE LOOP PROJECT FOCUSED ON PREVENTING FOOD WASTE IN NORTH CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS.ACTIVITIES:THESE FUNDS WILL BE USED TO DEVELOP A CLOSED LOOP LOCAL FOOD SYSTEM THROUGH FOOD WASTE PREVENTION EFFORTS FOCUSED ON PRIMARY PRODUCERS, INSTITUTIONS, AND CONSUMERS. ENGAGE NEIGHBORHOOD-BASED ORGANIZATIONS, STUDENTS AND LOCAL FARMERS IN NORTH CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS FOCUSING ON LEOMINSTER AND FITCHBURG. SUBRECIPIENT:THERE IS ONE SUBAWARD FOR INSTITUTIONAL FOOD WASTE PREVENTION PILOTS AT ONE FITCHBURG SCHOOL.OUTCOMES:EXPECTED DELIVERABLES INCLUDE: INCREASE KNOWLEDGE AND AWARENESS AMONG CONSUMERS ON THE IMPACTS OF FOOD WASTE AND DEVELOP AN UNDERSTANDING OF FOOD WASTE CAUSES AMONG PRIMARY PRODUCERS AND AT GROWING PLACES FOOD WAREHOUSE. DIRECT BENEFICIARIES OF THESE ACTIVITIES ARE THE RESIDENTS OF THE TARGETED COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL FARMERS. PUBLIC HEALTH IS IMPROVED VIA LOWER METHANE EMISSIONS FROM LANDFILLS TO REDUCE CLIMATE CHANGE, CLIMATE MITIGATED HIGH HEAT DAYS/WEATHER EVENTS, AND LOWER INCINERATOR EMISSIONS/REDUCED AIR POLLUTION. PRIMARY PRODUCERS USE LESS WATER, ENERGY, FERTILIZER AND PESTICIDES BECAUSE THEY ONLY GROW WHAT CONSUMERS USE. PRODUCE IS HANDLED EFFICIENTLY IN THE NCMA FOOD SYSTEM WITH REDUCED SPOILAGE AT ALL STAGES. LOW-INCOME FOOD INSECURE CONSUMERS REDUCE FOOD WASTE AND SAVE DOLLARS TO SPEND ON HEALTHCARE AND RENT. MUNICIPALITIES REDUCE LANDFILL COSTS, SO FUNDS ARE RE-DIRECTED TO RESIDENT SERVICES. | $40K | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | INDY WINTER FARMERS MARKET COMMUNITY PROMOTION PROGRAM: SNAP BENEFITS AND VENDOR SUPPORT | $24.7K | FY2014 | Sep 2014 – Sep 2016 |
| Department of Agriculture | THIS GRANT SUPPORTS THE COSTS INCURRED TO IMPLEMENT MEASURES TO RESPOND TO THE NOVEL CORONAVIRUS 2019 (COVID-19), WHICH MAY INCLUDE WORKPLACE SAFETY, MARKET PIVOTS, RETROFITTING FACILITIES, TRANSPORTATION, WORKER HOUSING, AND MEDICAL EXPENSES. IT PROVIDES NEEDED RELIEF TO THE FOOD PROCESSORS, DISTRIBUTORS, FARMERS MARKETS, AND PRODUCERS FOR THEIR COSTS INCURRED BETWEEN JANUARY 27, 2020, THE DATE UPON WHICH THE PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY WAS DECLARED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICE (HHS) UNDER SECTION 319 OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE ACT, AND DECEMBER 31, 2021. BENEFICIARIES INCLUDE THE EMPLOYEES OF THE FOOD PROCESSORS, DISTRIBUTORS, FARMERS MARKETS, AND PRODUCERS. | $15K | FY2022 | Jan 2022 – Jan 2023 |
Department of Agriculture
$699.7K
LED BY GROWING PLACES, THE LOCAL FOOD WORKS IN NORTH CENTRAL MA LOCAL FOOD PROMOTION PROGRAM PROJECT BUILDS ON FIVE YEARS OF PLANNING AND ASSESSMENT TO CREATE AN EQUITABLE, SUSTAINABLE, AND ACCESSIBLE NORTH CENTRAL MA (NCMA) FOOD SYSTEM THAT CAN SUPPORT THE REGIONS 200 SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZED FARMS, ADDRESS HIGH RATES OF FOOD INSECURITY AND NUTRITION RELATED CHRONIC DISEASES, AND STRENGTHEN THE LOCAL ECONOMY VIA A REGIONAL FOOD VALUE CHAIN. THE PROJECT IS FOUNDED ON A NCMA FOOD SYSTEM FEASIBILITY STUDY, REGIONAL FOOD CENTER OPERATING MODEL AND BUSINESS PLAN, AND STRATEGIC PLAN THAT WERE DEVELOPED WITH INPUT FROM 130 DIVERSE COMMUNITY PARTNERS THAT COMPRISE THE LOCAL FOOD WORKS-NCMA COALITION. KEY PROJECT ACTIVITIES SEEK TO 1) BUILD A ROBUST MID-TIER VALUE CHAIN THROUGH A NEW REGIONAL FOOD PROCESSING CENTER 2) SUPPORT LOCAL FARMERS AND SMALL FOOD BUSINESSES TO EXPAND TO NEW MARKET CHANNELS AND 3) DEVELOP A COORDINATED AND ACCESSIBLE MARKETING AND PROMOTION SYSTEM WITH SUPPORTIVE PURCHASING TECHNOLOGY. AS A RESULT OF PROJECT ACTIVITIES, PRIMARY PROJECT DELIVERABLES AND OUTCOMES DURING THE GRANT PERIOD INCLUDE:10 NEW MARKET CHANNELS 65 MARKET ACCESS POINTS PARTICIPATING IN LOCAL FOOD WORKS REGIONAL FOOD CENTERS (LFW-RFC) DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM45 NCMA FARMERS REACH NEW MARKET CHANNELS THROUGH THE LFW-RFC15 SMALL FOOD BUSINESS MICROENTERPRISES REACH NEW MARKET CHANNELS THROUGH THE LFW-RFC AND SUPPORT THE CENTERS GROWTH VIA KITCHEN RENTALS FOR PRODUCT PRODUCTION2,370 CONSUMERS PURCHASE RECEIVE LOCALLY PRODUCED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS FROM THE LFW-RFC GENERATING AN ADDITIONAL 753,131 IN SALES71 FOOD AND AGRICULTURE JOBS CREATED OR MAINTAINED BECAUSE OF THE LFW-RFC IN ADDITION TO SHORT- AND MEDIUM-TERM OUTCOMES, THE PROJECT WILL BOLSTER THE NCMA FOOD SYSTEM TO STRENGTHEN THE LOCAL FOOD ECONOMY, INCREASE EQUITABLE HEALTHY FOOD ACCESS FOR HOUSEHOLDS THAT SUFFER FROM DISPROPORTIONATE RATES OF NUTRITION RELATED CHRONIC DISEASES, AND IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF LIFE OF NCMA FARMERS AND SMALL FOOD BUSINESSES. THE THREE MAIN PRIMARY BENEFICIARIES OF THIS PROJECT OTHER THAT GROWING PLACES WHO SERVES AS THE MID-TIER ENTERPRISE ARE NCMA FARMERS FOCUSING ON THOSE WHO ARE SMALL AND HISTORICALLY UNDERSERVED SMALL FOOD BUSINESSES AND CONSUMERS FOCUSING ON THOSE WHO ARE FOOD INSECURE ALTHOUGH ALL WILL BENEFIT. EACH WILL ACHIEVE SHORT TERM BENEFITS RELATED TO KNOWLEDGE, AWARENESS, SKILLS, AND ACCESS AS WELL AS LONG-TERM BENEFITS RELATED TO FINANCIAL GAINS SAVINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS IN HEALTH AND QUALITY OF LIFE. TO ACHIEVE PROJECT OBJECTIVES, LOCAL FOOD WORKS IN NORTH CENTRAL MA IS CENTERED ON COMMUNITY COLLABORATION AND COLLECTIVE IMPACT THROUGH THE LOCAL FOOD WORKS STEERING COMMITTEE AND BROADER COALITION. TOWARDS THIS END, THE PROJECT ENGAGES FARMER-BASED ORGANIZATIONS (CENTRAL MASS GROWN AND THE MONTACHUSETT AGRICULTURAL ALLIANCE) TO RECRUIT AND EMBED A STRONG FARMERS VOICE WITHIN ALL PROJECT ACTIVITIES HEAL, A YOUTH AND RESIDENT DRIVEN COALITION FOCUSED ON ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT AND HEALTHY FOOD ACCESS THAT WILL SUPPORT CONSUMER AND SMALL FOOD BUSINESS ENGAGEMENT THE NORTH CENTRAL MA HEALTH EQUITY PARTNERSHIP (CHNA9) TO ENGAGE NCMAS ANCHOR INSTITUTIONS TO BUY LOCAL VIA ITS ANCHOR COLLABORATIVE THE UNITED WAY OF NORTH CENTRAL MA TO RECRUIT LOCAL FOOD PANTRIES TO INCREASE LOCAL PURCHASING FROM THE LFW-RFC THE NORTH CENTRAL MA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE TO PROMOTE THE PROJECT TO LOCAL FOOD BUYERS AND ENTREPRENEURS LOCAL SCHOOLS, COLLEGES AND HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS TO SUPPORT LOCAL PURCHASING AT THE INSTITUTIONAL AND CONSUMER LEVELS AND NCMA MUNICIPALITIES AND THE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION TO PROMOTE THE PROJECT AND LEVERAGE RESOURCES FOR THE REGIONAL FOOD CENTERS CONTINUED GROWTH AND EXPANSION. ALSO SUPPORTING THE PROJECT ARE CONSULTANTS WITH EXPERTISE IN FOOD SAFETY, PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT, AND COMMUNICATION WHO WILL BUILD CAPACITY OF PARTNERS TO CREATE A SUSTAINABLE NCMA FOOD VALUE CHAIN.
Department of Agriculture
$249.4K
IN ITS 27-TOWN FOOTPRINT,NORTH CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS (NCMA) HOSTS 250+ FARMS,WITH MOST IDENTIFYING AS SMALL OR MEDIUM IN SIZE. HOWEVER,AGRICULTURE ONLY COMPRISES ABOUT 2% OF THE REGION'S TOTAL EMPLOYMENT,AND RESIDENTS ARE AMONG THE UNHEALTHIEST IN THE STATE. REPRESENTING DIVERSE SECTORS OF THE FOOD SYSTEM,THE NORTH CENTRAL MA FOOD SYSTEM PARTNERSHIP HAS BEEN BUILDING MOMENTUM OVER TWO YEARS TO CREATE A SUSTAINABLE AND RESILIENT LOCAL FOOD SYSTEM. DURING ITS DEVELOPMENT,COVID-19 FORCED THE REGION TO MOVE LOCAL FOOD THROUGH NEW CHANNELS TO KEEP THE FOOD SYSTEM VIABLE. THIS FURTHER INCREASED AWARENESS ABOUT NCMA'S UNTAPPED POTENTIAL AND LAID A SOLID FOUNDATION FOR THE PARTNERSHIP TO BUILD FROM. CONSEQUENTLY,THE NORTH CENTRAL MA FOOD SYSTEM PARTNERSHIP IS POISED TO CREATE A VIBRANT LOCAL FOOD ECONOMY AND IMPROVE THE HEALTH OF RESIDENTS. OVER THE NEXT TWO YEARS,THEY WILL CONDUCT A COMPREHENSIVE PLANNING PROCESS TO CREATE A SUSTAINABLE AND RESILIENT NCMA FOOD VALUE CHAIN AND BUSINESS MODEL.KEY ACTIVITIES THAT WILL HELP ACHIEVE PARTNERSHIP GOALS INCLUDE A STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS VIA A STRENGTHS,OPPORTUNITIES,ASPIRATIONS,RESULTS 'SOAR' ANALYSIS TO FORMALIZE THE PARTNERSHIP'S VISION,MISSION,VALUES,GOALS ,MEMBERSHIP,AND STRUCTURE; A FEASIBILITY STUDY TO DEVELOP AN OPERATING AND BUSINESS PLAN FOR A REGIONAL FOOD CAMPUS; DEVELOPMENT OF A RESOURCE LIBRARY WITH AVAILABLE FUNDING,TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE,AND EVIDENCE-BASED INFORMATION TO HELP GROW THE FOOD CAMPUS; AND THE ACTIVATION OF A BI-DIRECTIONAL COMMUNICATION NETWORK TO CONNECT DIVERSE SECTORS WITHIN THE NCMA FOOD SYSTEM.
Department of Agriculture
$187.4K
GROW GETTERS: NEXT-GEN URBAN FARMER TRAINING PROGRAM
Department of Agriculture
$99.9K
CN FARM TO SCHOOL GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$48.6K
CN FARM TO SCHOOL SUPPLEMENTAL
Environmental Protection Agency
$40K
DESCRIPTION:THE PURPOSE OF THIS COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT IS TO PROVIDE FUNDING TO GROWING PLACES PROPOSES LOCAL FOOD WORKS-CLOSING THE LOOP PROJECT FOCUSED ON PREVENTING FOOD WASTE IN NORTH CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS.ACTIVITIES:THESE FUNDS WILL BE USED TO DEVELOP A CLOSED LOOP LOCAL FOOD SYSTEM THROUGH FOOD WASTE PREVENTION EFFORTS FOCUSED ON PRIMARY PRODUCERS, INSTITUTIONS, AND CONSUMERS. ENGAGE NEIGHBORHOOD-BASED ORGANIZATIONS, STUDENTS AND LOCAL FARMERS IN NORTH CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS FOCUSING ON LEOMINSTER AND FITCHBURG. SUBRECIPIENT:THERE IS ONE SUBAWARD FOR INSTITUTIONAL FOOD WASTE PREVENTION PILOTS AT ONE FITCHBURG SCHOOL.OUTCOMES:EXPECTED DELIVERABLES INCLUDE: INCREASE KNOWLEDGE AND AWARENESS AMONG CONSUMERS ON THE IMPACTS OF FOOD WASTE AND DEVELOP AN UNDERSTANDING OF FOOD WASTE CAUSES AMONG PRIMARY PRODUCERS AND AT GROWING PLACES FOOD WAREHOUSE. DIRECT BENEFICIARIES OF THESE ACTIVITIES ARE THE RESIDENTS OF THE TARGETED COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL FARMERS. PUBLIC HEALTH IS IMPROVED VIA LOWER METHANE EMISSIONS FROM LANDFILLS TO REDUCE CLIMATE CHANGE, CLIMATE MITIGATED HIGH HEAT DAYS/WEATHER EVENTS, AND LOWER INCINERATOR EMISSIONS/REDUCED AIR POLLUTION. PRIMARY PRODUCERS USE LESS WATER, ENERGY, FERTILIZER AND PESTICIDES BECAUSE THEY ONLY GROW WHAT CONSUMERS USE. PRODUCE IS HANDLED EFFICIENTLY IN THE NCMA FOOD SYSTEM WITH REDUCED SPOILAGE AT ALL STAGES. LOW-INCOME FOOD INSECURE CONSUMERS REDUCE FOOD WASTE AND SAVE DOLLARS TO SPEND ON HEALTHCARE AND RENT. MUNICIPALITIES REDUCE LANDFILL COSTS, SO FUNDS ARE RE-DIRECTED TO RESIDENT SERVICES.
Department of Agriculture
$24.7K
INDY WINTER FARMERS MARKET COMMUNITY PROMOTION PROGRAM: SNAP BENEFITS AND VENDOR SUPPORT
Department of Agriculture
$15K
THIS GRANT SUPPORTS THE COSTS INCURRED TO IMPLEMENT MEASURES TO RESPOND TO THE NOVEL CORONAVIRUS 2019 (COVID-19), WHICH MAY INCLUDE WORKPLACE SAFETY, MARKET PIVOTS, RETROFITTING FACILITIES, TRANSPORTATION, WORKER HOUSING, AND MEDICAL EXPENSES. IT PROVIDES NEEDED RELIEF TO THE FOOD PROCESSORS, DISTRIBUTORS, FARMERS MARKETS, AND PRODUCERS FOR THEIR COSTS INCURRED BETWEEN JANUARY 27, 2020, THE DATE UPON WHICH THE PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY WAS DECLARED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICE (HHS) UNDER SECTION 319 OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE ACT, AND DECEMBER 31, 2021. BENEFICIARIES INCLUDE THE EMPLOYEES OF THE FOOD PROCESSORS, DISTRIBUTORS, FARMERS MARKETS, AND PRODUCERS.
Source: Federal Audit Clearinghouse (fac.gov)
No federal single audit records found for this organization.
Single audits are required for entities expending $750,000+ in federal awards annually.
Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990
No officer or director compensation data available for this organization.
This data is sourced from IRS Form 990, Part VII. It may not be available if the organization files Form 990-N (e-Postcard) or has not yet been enriched.
Source: IRS Publication 78, Auto-Revocation List & e-Postcard Data
Tax-deductible contributions: Yes
Deductibility code: PC
Sources: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (XML) & ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Scroll →
| Year | Revenue | Contributions | Expenses | Assets | Net Assets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $188.1K | $3,810 | $215.2K | $79.7K | $77.4K |
| 2022 | $233.8K | $4,383 | $192.5K | $106.2K | $104.6K |
| 2021 | $186.8K | $3,846 | $184.1K | $64.7K | $63.2K |
| 2020 | $246.2K | $7,239 | $184.5K | $61.9K |
Sources: ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer & IRS e-File Index
| Tax Year | Form Type | Source | Documents |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 990 | IRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2023 | 990 | DataIRS e-File | |
| 2022 | 990 | DataIRS e-File |
Financial data: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer (Tax Year 2023)
Federal grants: USAspending.gov (live)
Organization info: IRS Business Master File · ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Tax-deductibility: IRS Publication 78
| $60.4K |
| 2019 | $182.9K | $1,000 | $180.2K | -$270 | -$1,314 |
| 2018 | $185.3K | $1,500 | $189.2K | -$2,885 | -$4,001 |
| 2017 | $178.7K | $1,320 | $177.3K | $1,294 | -$116 |
| 2016 | $169.4K | $11.9K | $174K | $171 | -$1,443 |
| 2015 | $167.7K | $6,636 | $176.2K | $6,472 | $3,132 |
| 2014 | $171.1K | $5,700 | $171.4K | $14.5K | $11.6K |
| 2013 | $176.9K | $14.8K | $178K | $14.6K | $12K |
| 2012 | $160.2K | $5,491 | $177.6K | $15.4K | $13.1K |
| 2011 | $179.3K | $4,200 | $179.1K | $33.6K | $30.5K |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data | PDF not yet published by IRS |
| 2019 | 990 | Data |
| 2018 | 990 | Data |
| 2017 | 990 | Data |
| 2016 | 990 | Data |
| 2015 | 990 | Data |
| 2014 | 990 | Data |
| 2013 | 990 | Data |
| 2012 | 990 | Data |
| 2011 | 990 | Data |
| 2010 | 990 | — |
| 2009 | 990 | — |
| 2008 | 990 | — |
| 2007 | 990 | — |
| 2006 | 990 | — |
| 2005 | 990 | — |
| 2004 | 990 | — |
| 2003 | 990 | — |
| 2001 | 990 | — |