By Libby Kennedy | Director of Strategic Projects
Coronavirus has exacerbated food insecurity and socioeconomic disparities across our region. As a result of COVID-19, the city of Houston and Harris County have seen a dramatic rise in unmet food needs. In February 2020 Urban Harvest launched “Grow Resilience,” a crisis-response strategy to continue providing resources and education, economic development, and food to those who need it most. In 2020, Urban Harvest is exploring new technologies and adapting existing programming and communication approaches to meet the increased demand for our services.
Under Grow Resilience, our Education program is re-imagining how to continue to support educators and deliver meaningful learning opportunities for school students, while also using this crisis as an opportunity to connect with parents by using new technologies to engage families in household gardening. Since March 2020 all of our traditional in-person classes, are transitioning to a free online format with opensource webinars, remote classes, virtual cooking demos, kids’ activities, organic gardening videos, blogs, and recipe cards to make garden and nutrition education accessible to all. As we learn what is needed to support our schools and communities, we are piloting innovative approaches to increase our connection with students and the general public and creating the appropriate systems to expand our impact, include new partnerships, making sure we are building lasting partnerships based on our community’s needs.
In 2019, our Community Gardens program consolidated its model based on our organization’s strategic plan, shifting its focus from creating to sustaining gardens. Under “Grow Resilience” Urban Harvest is increasing the sustainability of the network while ensuring the safety and health of our gardeners. In light of Covid-19, a network-wide needs assessment identified our affiliate gardens’ most critical needs and priorities. To continue supporting our network of gardens, we have continued to deliver resources to our growing network of gardens through our Distribution “Hubs”. During our latest Hub in May 2020, we reached a total of 62 community gardens; 35 of them located in low-income, low-access areas; 15 Title 1 School gardens; and 14 donation gardens that are providing healthy food for the people who need it the most. Today, our focus continues to sustain our affiliate gardens with a special interest in increasing our impact in low-income, low-access neighborhoods and finding new ways to deliver resources and knowledge to tackle current challenges.
During these unprecedented times, Urban Harvest has institutionalized and expanded the impact of our Double Up program ensuring uninterrupted services even during times of crisis. Our Double Up Houston program has been at the forefront of existing gaps in food affordability, creating sustainable pathways for Houstonians to access healthy food by increasing the SNAP match from $20 to $30 per day on produce at thirteen farmers markets, farm stands, and pop-up sites across the city. To bring healthy food options closer to our beneficiaries, our SNAP-eligible Double Up Houston CSA (Community Supportive Agriculture) initiative allows shoppers to pick up their pre-packaged produce boxes via a contactless drive-thru. Double Up Houston brings together a broad network of 61 active partners including 34 Community partners, six Double Up Steering Committee members, an active network of 13 sites including farm stands and farmers markets located predominantly in underserved areas, seven Health Providers, and ten members of the Northeast Advisory Committee. These new adaptations are allowing Double Up Houston to make sure we continue to provide direct assistance to farmers and vendors through an increased customer base, new sales streams, and broader outreach and marketing.
Access to affordable, healthy food; reliable economic opportunities; and safe, outdoor green space has never been more important. Urban Harvest is committed to doing our part to ensure everyone stays healthy, active, and nutritiously fed. As we build towards a more robust and resilient organization, we are piloting two innovative initiatives as part of our Grow Resilience strategy: The Urban Harvest Mobile Market which is closing gaps in food access and affordability in underserved neighborhoods; and The Summer Enrichment “Grow Kits” initiative which is piloting new pathways to deliver socially-distant organic gardening education, resources, and information about SNAP and Double Up Houston to underserved families, encouraging them to explore nature and grow healthy food at home.
Today, Grow Resilience is maximizing local opportunity and Urban Harvest's established relationships to quickly adapt, scale, and promote our interventions that address COVID-19-related needs. UrbanHarvest has demonstrated experience in this rapid response marketing, utilizing our well-established scope and reach to engage high numbers of Harris County residents. With over 25 years of leadership in the local food system, Urban Harvest is uniquely poised to lead holistic interventions that target equitable food access, local agricultural production, and healthy food education. We expect that the “Grow Kits” and our recently launched Urban Harvest’s Mobile Market pilot initiatives become cross-sector collaborations that build capacity for our organization and food system, and resilience for our city. Additionally, these collaborations are providing Urban Harvest with more robust insights into the interests and needs of our constituents, access to greater resources, and allowing our organization to be responsive to the priorities of those we serve.
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