Locavore – Urban Earthworm https://www.urbanearthworm.org Fri, 15 Jan 2016 18:44:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.4.15 https://www.urbanearthworm.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/cropped-229133_10102400207157548_602676568_n-32x32.jpg Locavore – Urban Earthworm https://www.urbanearthworm.org 32 32 Can Shopping Local Save Detroit? https://www.urbanearthworm.org/2015/02/20/can-shopping-local-save-detroit/ https://www.urbanearthworm.org/2015/02/20/can-shopping-local-save-detroit/#respond Fri, 20 Feb 2015 15:16:12 +0000 http://www.urbanearthworm.org/?p=1160 This is a re-working of yesterday’s post.  I apologize for the redundancy.       If there is one thing in abundance in Detroit, it’s saviors.  From financiers to philanthropists...

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This is a re-working of yesterday’s post.  I apologize for the redundancy.

      If there is one thing in abundance in Detroit, it’s saviors.  From financiers to philanthropists to entrepreneurs, we have as many saviors as we do vacant lots.  As a recovering participant in the “save Detroit” movement, let me tell you there is no one person, no one plan, no one answer for Detroit.  And, more importantly Detroit doesn’t need to be saved.

      Detroit needs work.  It needs improvement.  There are very real, very serious ongoing struggles.  But to say Detroit needs to be saved is to imply a need for rescue from without and to disregard the good within.  We don’t need one great act of salvation from a singular celebrity savior.  We need 700,000 small steps (and just a few big ones) to keep heading in the right direction – 700,000 small steps that have already begun, and we need most of those steps to come from those of us already here.

      Grand schemes are great, but what can those of us more interested in small steps and the long run do to improve our great big small town?  The list is long: Say hello to your neighbor, plant a tree, carpool, talk about the schools – a lot, talk about transit, talk about race, VOTE!, read the Detroit Future City plan (whether you choose to agree with it or not), take an interest, volunteer, and support local businesses.

This is a big small step.  The economic benefits of shopping locally cannot be over stated.  Supporting local businesses strengthens neighborhoods, supports innovation, creates jobs, and in most cases even helps heal the environment.  According to the research firm Civic Economics, On average, 48 percent of each purchase at local independent businesses was recirculated locally, compared to less than 14 percent of purchases at chain stores/franchises.  That is a lot more money staying in Detroit!  More information on these studies is available here.

The Balle Institute estimates that if 25% of Detroit’s food could be sourced locally, it would generate nearly 5,000 jobs, create $20 million in new local taxes, and $125 million in new household income.

If Detroit stands to reap such benefits from localizing just 25% of food production, imagine the impact if we could localize 25% of the entire economy!   Clothes, furniture, books, toys, art, sporting goods, bicycles – you can find nearly anything through local businesses if you just know where to look.

That can be one of the major hurdles to shopping locally.  Small businesses and entrepreneurs who are just starting out are rarely the first resources that show up in internet searches.  They often have limited money for advertising and may not even have a physical location from which they can operate.  Well, Eastern Market is working to change that.

Shop Local Detroit

Eastern Market has been a powerhouse in local food for decades, and last summer, they launched the Sunday Street Market, a local alternative to the shopping mall aimed at connecting local businesses and entrepreneurs with consumers looking for unique non-food products and a vibrant shopping experience.  By leveraging an already well-known shopping venue at an underutilized time, the Sunday Street Market is able to offer prime and reliable retail space to makers, entrepreneurs, and small businesses for a small fraction of what a storefront would cost – and to offer those of us looking to support the local economy a one-stop-shop, if you will.

This summer, the Sunday Street Market returns with even more vendors, products, and services.  There is also a children’s activity center every week, regular food truck rallies, and both new and returning entertainment and events.  Did you miss the Market Renaissance Festival (by the Michigan Renaissance Festival) last year?  They’ll be back this year (August 9th)!  Feel like taking in a Detroit Derby Girls bout while noshing some amazing food truck faire?  You’ll have two chances this summer.

So pick up some litter, drink a bottle of Dirty Blonde, and swing hit up some local businesses next time you need a new T-shirt or kitchen table.  Then, in 20 years, you can tell people how you saved Detroit.

The Sunday Street Market runs every Sunday June through October.  The Market is currently accepting applications for vendors for all market days.  The application can be found at EasternMarket.com.  The application deadline is March 9th, 2015.

Explore Eastern Market online at Facebook.com/EasternMarketDetroit and @EasternMarket on Twitter and Instagram.  Official hashtags: #SundayStMkt #EasternMkt.

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Inspiration of a New Detroiter https://www.urbanearthworm.org/2013/11/14/inspiration-new-detroiter/ https://www.urbanearthworm.org/2013/11/14/inspiration-new-detroiter/#comments Thu, 14 Nov 2013 19:15:00 +0000 http://www.urbanearthworm.org/?p=1000 I suspect the reactions I received when telling people I was moving to Detroit were similar to those one might receive after announcing a plan to move to Yemen or...

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Eastern Market Detroit opportunity

I suspect the reactions I received when telling people I was moving to Detroit were similar to those one might receive after announcing a plan to move to Yemen or to give up practicing law in order to farm tarantulas.  Most were skeptical; some were interested; several were downright incredulous.  After three months here, my husband and I know we made the right decision.

I grew up in West Michigan with all the standard Michigan pride.  I drank pop (Rock ‘n Rye, of course), used my hand as a map, and have always known how to pronounce Mackinac, Charlevoix, and Ypsilanti.  At 18, I took off to Tulane University – and pre-Katrina New Orleans – to see the “real” world.  Twelve years and eight states later, it was time to come home.  Choosing Michigan was easy.  Choosing Michigan was obvious.  Choosing Detroit took more thought.  Several factors went into our choice, but ultimately it was a gut decision.  Detroit felt right for us.

Others, clearly, did not understand.  I would point to the historically and culturally unique precipice on which Detroit currently sits, the amazing innovation and opportunities available here, and even the proximity to Ontario (where I was born and where many of my relatives reside).  Ultimately, though, the skeptical remained unconvinced – and maybe, subconsciously, I was too.

We did not move to Detroit for any one perfect opportunity – we chose the place before either of us found our career paths here.  We felt like we could do good things here, and we came to see where life would take us.

So I never had a good answer to “Why Detroit?” before we moved.  But now, three months in, I think I do:

“Because Eastern Market, that’s why.”

Full disclosure: I now work for Eastern Market.  And disclaimer: That is not why I’m writing this post. (Ok, not entirely why).

Spanning 5 city blocks, the non-profit Eastern Market Corporation, or EMC, (not to be confused with the Eastern Market District, the neighborhood that houses the Market) is the largest historic public market in the United States.  For over 100 years, Eastern Market has connected small farms with customers from metro Detroit looking for fresh, local produce.  And that is enough to make Eastern Market a great place, but a look behind the scenes reveals that Eastern Market is something truly incredible.

urban agriculture in DetroitEastern Market is so much more than the Saturday and Tuesday Farmer’s Markets that serve as its public face.  The vision of EMC is “to create the most inclusive, resilient, and robust regional food hub in the United States,” and the work being done to surpass that vision is truly inspiring to this new Detroiter.

EMC’s work in greater Detroit spans from food access programs that strengthen the 15+ community markets around Detroit and bring pop-up Farm Stands to underserved areas, to work with Detroit’s public schools to convert 30% of their $16 million annual food purchases to local, fresh, and minimally processed items.  They have established an incubator process for food entrepreneurs to support them through the development and production pipeline.  The Detroit Kitchen Connect program coordinates licensed professional kitchens for entrepreneurs who could not otherwise access such resources.  These are a mere sampling of EMC’s many programs and initiatives.

Eastern Market’s mission statement proclaims “We leverage Eastern Market’s dynamic history, manage operations, develop programs, build facilities, and provide critical infrastructure to: Strengthen the Eastern Market District; Fortify the food sector as a pillar of regional economic growth; and Improve access to healthy, green, affordable, and fair food choices in Detroit and throughout Southeast Michigan.”  And they mean it.

One look at Eastern Market’s Strategic Plan reveals the truth behind its words.  This goes far beyond a farmer’s market.  When EMC President Dan Carmody references a “regional food hub,” he envisions the entire scope of food production being localized to the southeast Michigan region (with parts of Ontario and Ohio) and centralized in the 43 acre Eastern Market District.  By embracing not only farmers and fresh produce but also food production, processing, and packaging, the potential for job creation grows exponentially and encompasses the widest possible variety of skill levels – from entry level labor to high-tech engineering and corporate management.

Pop Up Farm Stands in Detroit Food Deserts

It has been estimated that if 25% of Detroit’s food could be sourced locally it would generate nearly 5,000 jobs, create $20 million in new local taxes, and $125 million in new household income (based on information from Micheal Schuman of the Balle Institute).  That is what a regional food hub could mean for Detroit, and Eastern Market is making it happen.

EMC further recognizes the need to be intentional in developing the full potential of the Market and Market district by carefully integrating non-food businesses into the mix.  By activating EMC spaces with non-food resources and events at times when the farmers are not present and the district may be otherwise dormant, the district becomes a more complete and fully vibrant neighborhood without undermining its food-centric character.

In the spring, EMC will launch its new Sunday Market, a “Stuff Market” counterpoint to Saturday’s food Market.  Visitors to Eastern Market on Sundays will experience the best in local products and merchandise.  Artisans, craftspeople, makers, inventors, collectors, and more will fill the Sheds, becoming Detroit’s newest shopping mall alternative and center for locally made goods.

During the Detroit Design Festival in September, Eastern Market added a new night market concept, the Third Thursdays series.  These fun focused events bring out the best in local food trucks, merchants, and artisans interspersed with lively activities.  In recognition of Homelessness and Hunger Awareness Week, the Third Thursday in November, the 21st, will feature a Soup and Chili Throw-Down between several restaurants from the Eastern Market District to benefit COTS, the Coalition on Temporary Shelter.  For $5, patrons can purchase a ticket to sample the soups and chilis and vote on their favorite.  Those who bring items from this list to donate to COTS will receive a free taste and vote ticket.

In addition to the Throw-Down, Fowling and Playworks will be running games.  The College for Creative Studies will be running a pop-up studio offering professional portraits for a fraction of the typical cost.  D:Hive will be leading walking tours of the Eastern Market District.  The list of fun opportunities at Third Thursdays grows every day, as Eastern Market grows into a model mixed-use, food-centric neighborhood.

That is a lot of growth coming from a single organization.  And while EMC’s mission is unique in Detroit, the amount of good, the energy, and the vibrant development are not.  Eastern Market is a microcosm of all that Detroit revitalization has to offer.  It is community and business together.  It is the past, present, and future alive and thriving in one place.  Stroll through the Market on a Saturday and you will see every part of Detroit, every race, ethnicity, and social class, every level of business from new to historic, trendy to classic.  Eastern Market is where Detroit comes together and where we become Detroit.

wholesale night market Detroit
Eastern Market also has a wholesale market from midnight to 6am weekdays.

And that is just the greens on the beet, so to speak.  There is so much more below the surface.

I’ve been uncovering more to love about Detroit every day.  I love running down the Dequinder Cut and up the River Front.  I love the view on Woodward as I head downtown.  I have 15 new favorite restaurants and have experienced the frenetic enthusiasm of Lion’s tailgating and the Tigers in the playoffs.  I love the pervasive feeling of potential mingled with determination.  I love the attitude of this place.

And I love the real of Detroit.  Because there is no pretending Detroit doesn’t have problems.  There is no false face of Detroit.  There is sadness here, and there has been trouble, and we know it.  There is homelessness and hunger, crime and struggle every day.  Many of the problems you find in all major cities seem magnified here.  But the will to overcome is magnified, too.  Detroiters are facing the issues of this city head on.  So when I work in or pass through blighted neighborhoods, I do feel the sadness but I do not feel despair.

I have lived and worked up and down the eastern US from Manhattan to New Orleans, and in my first three months here in Detroit I have seen more innovation and creation than anywhere else; more everyday people doing extraordinary things than anywhere else.  There is a feeling of newness and regeneration in Detroit that I have never felt from another place.  And Eastern Market is one of several loud, colorful, and ever-strengthening bursts of evolution buzzing in this city.

So when people scrunch up their noses and ask, “why Detroit?”  I just smile and put on my teacher face.

“Because Eastern Market, that’s why.”

Great opportunities in Detroit

If you’re interested in supporting Eastern Market’s mission, you can do so here.If you’re looking for more information on the great things happening in Detroit, here are some start points:
Detroit SOUP
Gleaners
Detroit Bike City
Detroit #1 in US for Tech Job Growth
Detroit in Top Ten for Emerging Green Tech
Mt. Elliot Makerspace
Detroit Revitalization Fellowship Program and Challenge Detroit

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Urban Foraging and Wild Edibles: New Feature https://www.urbanearthworm.org/2013/07/29/urban-foraging-and-wild-edibles-new-feature/ https://www.urbanearthworm.org/2013/07/29/urban-foraging-and-wild-edibles-new-feature/#comments Mon, 29 Jul 2013 15:19:45 +0000 http://www.urbanearthworm.org/?p=848        A quick examination of an unused former flower bed at my mom’s house revealed a treasure trove of wild edibles – edible weeds, if you will.  The rest of...

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       A quick examination of an unused former flower bed at my mom’s house revealed a treasure trove of wild edibles – edible weeds, if you will.  The rest of her yard and forest edge provided even more bounty.  If were were stranded here with no food (results of an interesting catastrophe since she lives less than a mile from town), we’d be set for a while.

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These are only SOME of the edible weeds I found walking from one end of the yard to the crick.

      I’ve been studying wild edibles / edible weeds for some time now, preparing myself for urban foraging in and around Detroit, and the interest others have expressed in my new hobby has been abundant. So:

      Starting in September, I will be launching a new feature here on Urban Earthworm: Urban Foraging, Wild Edibles and Edible Weeds. Shoot me any questions on the Facebook page in the meantime.

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