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Food Hubs Connect Small Farmers To Communities In Need Of Produce

Between the growing warehouse district and the south side of Peoria, Illinois, sits 1312 SW Adams Street. The city-owned building looks like a great space for a haunted house: cracked paint, holes, shattered glass and pieces of drywall littering the staircases.

The building will need plenty of upgrades before any food hub or community space could be opened to the public. This is an upstairs hallway.
Credit Madelyn Beck / Harvest Public Media
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Harvest Public Media
The building will need plenty of upgrades before any food hub or community space could be opened to the public. This is an upstairs hallway.

But officials and economic development groups have another idea. They put up booths and led tours of the building in late May, showing how it could be used to bring health services and healthy food to an area that’s been losing businesses like grocery stores and for years.

Organizers also envision it as a place for local farmers to team up and sell their food to places they might not otherwise provide a big enough bounty for.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s food hub databaseshows 237 food hubs nationwide; there are eight in Illinois, though half are in Chicago. These help aggregate food from all kinds of farms to sell to commercial businesses or to public institutions like schools.

Tory Dahlhoff, an outreach and rural development coordinator for the Greater Peoria Economic Development Council, said strengthening the relationship between struggling rural areas and struggling urban areas could benefit both.

A touring group checks out a loading dock where city officials in Peoria, Illinois, suggest interested parties build a food hub. that's a place that stores produce from farmers around the region and sells it in bulk to stores, restaurants and local consumers.
Credit Madelyn Beck / Harvest Public Media
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Harvest Public Media
A touring group checks out a loading dock where city officials in Peoria, Illinois, suggest interested parties build a food hub. that's a place that stores produce from farmers around the region and sells it in bulk to stores, restaurants and local consumers.

“My interest area, and the work I’m doing, is really around our regional food economy and how we could use that to drive economic development,” he said.

Dahlhoff said that while that the hub could serve lots of local businesses, he’d also want a grocery store in front or nearby so that the food would reach the local community, too.

There is proof food hubs work. City council members in Iowa City, Iowa, gave the organizing nonprofit, Field to Family, $45,000 to expand local operations. That doesn’t mean they’re without challenges, though, and many have closed in the first few years of operation.

Hurdles to clear

The pop-up event was meant to show what is possible in the space that looks broken down but is ideally located, according to Dahlhoff.

“Sometimes it’s hard to see through the blight within a building,” he said.

But bringing the dream into reality would take a lot of work, said Ross Black, Peoria’s community development director. That would include a group of invested buyers to purchase and upgrade the building with things like new heating and air conditioning and plumbing.

Still, Black said, the city specifically wants buyers who share their dream of creating a true community space that benefits the area.

There’s already a business across the street who’d be helped. Sous Chef is a grocery store that premakes meals, kind of like meal-box companies, but with more options and no subscription fee.

Katie Couri Rodolfi owns Sous Chef, a grocery store that pre-preps meals. Rodolfi said she strives to use as much local food as possible, and having a food hub next door would help her business, local farmers and the community as a whole.
Credit Madelyn Beck / Harvest Public Media
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Harvest Public Media
Katie Couri Rodolfi owns Sous Chef, a grocery store that pre-preps meals. Rodolfi said she strives to use as much local food as possible, and having a food hub next door would help her business, local farmers and the community as a whole.

“We’re trying to get as much (food) as we can from as close as we can,” owner Katie Couri Rodolfi said, adding that more markets in the area could help the farmers that her store already partners with.

Dwayne Harris helps educate the community about urban farming through the nearby Well Farm at Voris Field. He’s trying to promote urban farming and black farming communities in the area; fewer than 2% of U.S. farmers are black.

“It’s about organizing the community and also organizing the network of black farmers, getting it bigger,” he said. “Assessing the needs of that community. And then coming to the economics.”

For that, a food hub could help, Harris said.

Dwayne Harris works at Well Farm at Voris Field. He had a booth at the event, telling attendees about urban food systems and building up a network of black farmers.
Credit Madelyn Beck / Harvest Public Media
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Harvest Public Media
Dwayne Harris works at Well Farm at Voris Field. He had a booth at the event, telling attendees about urban food systems and building up a network of black farmers.

About 70 people showed up in Peoria, according to Sara Maillacheruvu, who works in community development for the City of Peoria. So far, there are no buyers. But she remains hopeful, saying the pop-up event and workshops they held in May are just the beginning.

Follow Madelyn on Twitter: @MadelynBeck8

Copyright 2021 Harvest Public Media. To see more, visit .

This is 1312 SW Adams St., a building owned by the City of Peoria, Illinois. It was home to a pop-up event on May 22 to show the community how it could help bring more fresh food and resources to an underserved part of town.
Madelyn Beck / Harvest Public Media
/
Harvest Public Media
This is 1312 SW Adams St., a building owned by the City of Peoria, Illinois. It was home to a pop-up event on May 22 to show the community how it could help bring more fresh food and resources to an underserved part of town.

Madelyn Beck