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Your feel-good story of the day

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* Kay Shipman at FarmWeek

Sam Acho saw a solution to food insecurity in the hundreds of people at the Everything Local Conference Wednesday in Springfield.

The former Chicago Bears linebacker and ESPN college football analyst shared how professional athletes on different Chicago teams helped create a source of healthy food on Chicago’s West Side. He delivered the keynote address for the conference sponsored by the Illinois Farm Bureau, Illinois Specialty Growers Association and Illinois Farmers Market Association in the Crowne Plaza.

During the racial strife in 2020, Acho and nine professional Chicago athletes “pulled up chairs and sat in a circle and listened” to 10 police officers and 30 teens in the Austin neighborhood. While touring the neighborhood, Acho remembered he and one of the other athletes noticed only one grocery store, but 10 liquor stores. The athletes wondered if they could do something about that problem.

Before they left the tour bus, a young girl spoke to the group. “You come to our community and leave, but a lot of us choose to live here. Some of you will remember that when you go to your homes,” Acho recalled.

* But, a week later, the athletes did come back to the neighborhood

The athletes proposed buying one of the liquor stores and turning it into a food market where the teens would work.

In August 2020, the Austin Harvest food mart pop-up opened with eight student entrepreneurs working after school three days a week. They sold fresh produce and flowers.

When the open-air market had to close for the season, a radiothon helped raise money for a permanent building and ground was broken in May 2022.

Now, 15 students are participating in a 12-week entrepreneurship program. They learn everything about starting a business from architectural design to customer service. They’re also learning banking, money management and budgeting.

* This is the liquor store they bought

* Wednesday Journal

The forthcoming building will be 2,500-square-feet and will maintain the look and feel of Austin Harvest’s outdoor pop-up market. Even the design process was youth led, with Austin Harvest staff working with architects to offer input into the building’s design and functionality. The design incorporates the pop-up’s original orange shipping container and will have a retractable roof to give the community gathering space an open feel. The permanent structure will also include dry storage space and state-of-the-art refrigeration units, allowing students to offer a wider array of fruits, vegetables and fresh flowers. […]

During the first two market seasons Austin Harvest was open three afternoons per week. More than 100 shoppers visited the market each week and students rung up more than 2,400 transactions. When Austin Harvest opens in spring 2023, Williams said the team plans to ease into operations and will consider expanding their hours of operation gradually. He pointed out that this is the first year since the market’s inception that it has operated without pandemic-related limitations.

“We don’t want to rob students of their school experience,” said Williams. “It’s all about balance. We want to serve in excellence and don’t want our students to be overwhelmed.”

* Artist rendering

posted by Rich Miller
Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 1:38 pm

Comments

  1. This is really great & a much needed smile today, ty Rich. Would love to see more of this kind of investing in communities.

    Comment by Loyal Virus Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 1:48 pm

  2. This. Good on them to get this moving.

    Comment by workingfromhome Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 1:59 pm

  3. This, and a lot more of it. Bravo

    Comment by Give Me A Break Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 2:00 pm

  4. There are a lot of similar good things going on in Chicago that we down-staters tend to miss (e.g., After School Matters, The Chicago Center for Urban Life and Culture, etc.).

    Thanks for sharing this story, Rich.

    Comment by H-W Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 2:35 pm

  5. A great story and well-known athletes make bigger impacts than clergy and most other professions. Would be great to see more of this and possible. Could start a trend.

    Comment by clec dcn Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 3:13 pm

  6. Nice story and I hope it might motivate others to assist and even fund other grassroots efforts. Thanks for sharing.

    Comment by jackmac Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 3:15 pm

  7. This is a great story. Thanks for posting it, Rich. Hope it helps folks realize that there’s a lot more to the West Side than the crime-focused stories we generally see in the media.

    One thing a lot of people don’t know about Chicago is that we have a lot of urban farms growing produce that is sold at farmers markets and to restaurants. These organizations do more than grow food, though; they deal with issues such as job training, post-prison re-integration, housing, etc.

    Comment by JoanP Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 3:21 pm

  8. That’s so great, feel good indeed.

    Thanks for sharing this

    Comment by Oswego Willy Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 3:49 pm

  9. This all day long and twice on Sunday.

    Want to give hope and purpose? This is the template, it can be tweaked for different neighborhoods, but the local aspect is the solution. I would be curious to track the students and see if their overall involvement in this improves their future lives. I would think it would.

    Comment by FormerParatrooper Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 5:08 pm

  10. Sam. Bleeping. Acho.

    Rockstar

    Comment by JS Mill Wednesday, Jan 18, 23 @ 6:30 pm

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