Corrected NCGT logo
NCGT Monthly Project Update
In This Issue:
Spotlight on New Resources
Food and Farm Business Development Webinar Series
Farmers, Grow Your Business with On-Farm Cold Storage!
NCGT Supply Chain Students Crunch the Numbers for Carolina Ground
NCGT and NC State Extension Offer Resources and Workshops on Collaborative Farming in NC
Apply Now for the 2018 NCGT Local Food Supply Chain Apprenticeship
Spotlight on New Resources


Hubs & Kitchens: Food Hubs, Commercial Community Kitchens, and Copackers in NC 

Produced by NCGT and UFOODS

Food hubs, commercial community kitchens, and copackers are intermediaries vital to the successful operation of supply chains connecting food that is grown in one area to consumers in that same area. This directory is designed to inform farmers and other food businesses of the location and services offered by these intermediaries. 

The directory also provides grocery and food service buyers - including restaurants and institutional food service at universities and hospitals - with information on where they can find North Carolina food and farm products packed for retail and wholesale markets.

Download the directory here.


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Food Business Road Map


Here's your online kickstarter for starting a food business! This is intended to be a resource-dense, high-level view of your path.
Originally created by Taylor E. Hayes, 2017 NCGT  Local Food Supply Chain Apprentice, with Eric Hallman and Sue Ellsworth.

Find the Food Business Road Map on the CEFS website, here.
Food and Farm Business Development Webinar Series


The 2017 Food and Farm Business Development Webinar Series ended in November. 

All recorded webinars are available on our YouTube channel !

Farmers, Grow Your Business with On-Farm Cold Storage!



NCGT and Natural Capital Investment Fund are partnering to offer a combination grant and low-interest loan program for purchasing on-farm cold storage units.  

Visit the NCGT website for more information.

 About NCGT
  
GOAL | Bring more locally-grown foods - produce, meat, dairy, and seafood - into mainstream retail and food service supply chains, thus enhancing food security by increasing access to local foods and by strengthening the economics of small to mid-sized farm and fishing operations.
  
STRATEGY | Identify the most promising solutions by which local production and associated value-added activities can enter local retail and food service markets, pilot these solutions in North Carolina, and evaluate and report the results for the benefit of other states and regions.
  
December 19, 2017
Greetings all,

NC Growing Together was initially funded through December 2017 by the Agriculture and Food Research Initiative of the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

We're happy to say that we'll be continuing NC Growing Together activities into 2018 and beyond.  Starting next year, this newsletter will report on NCGT as well as news from CEFS' other supply chain initiatives.

Sincerely,

Rebecca Dunning, Ph.D.

Lead, Supply Chain Initiatives, Center for Environmental Farming Systems
Research Assistant Professor, NC State University Department of Horticultural Science

NCGT Supply Chain Students Crunch the Numbers for Carolina Ground
  
NCGT supply chain students Siddharth Khandelwal (left) and Chris Arnett (right) presenting their poster.

When Jennifer Lapidus founded Carolina Ground in 2009 (as an initiative of the Carolina Farm Stewardship Association), she had a vision.  A former baker, she wanted to connect North Carolina's grain farmers, millers, and bakers - bringing together the grain supply chain to provide a consistent and sustainable market for southern-grown, organic grains.  At the time, the idea was novel.  "It was an experiment," she acknowledges.  She started on a shoestring, wanting to be financially conservative until her idea proved successful.

Eight years later, the business is a success, and she is ready to expand.  This past fall she worked with a team of three NCGT undergraduate business supply chain students to assess Carolina Ground's production processes and make recommendations for increasing productivity and efficiency.  She had weekly calls with the students - Chris Arnett, Siddharth Khandelwal, and Brian Neal - and they had lots of good questions.  It was the push Lapidus needed to gather materials and data she had already been collecting with the idea of expanding, but hadn't been able to prioritize while managing the day-to-day activities of running a business.  "It's really hard when you're running a business - you've got a lot of plates spinning," she says. 

"We were tasked with examining Carolina Ground's manufacturing process and facility, and looking up and down its supply chain for process improvements to increase efficiency," says team member Brian Neal.  The students' suggestions for improvement had to take into account Carolina Ground's unique cold stone milling process - which results in a more nutritious and higher quality flour - and its mission to source from local organic farms.  "They were great at recognizing the value of what we do," says Lapidus.

Carolina Ground's mill.
In the end, the team suggested upgrading two pieces of equipment.  They were changes that Lapidus had considered making; the team's work validated her hunch that it made good financial sense and was the right time to expand.  "They did an incredible job of putting the pieces together," says Lapidus.  "It was really awesome.  Working with the students definitely gave me the confidence to move forward." 

The experience proved fruitful for Neal as well.  "Being able to work with a business small enough to listen and with lots of room for efficiency improvements was directly helpful to my current job," he says.  After graduation, Neal started work as a supply chain analyst in the healthcare industry.  "Doing the supply chain stuff opened up opportunities for me and was the specific reason I got the job I'm at now," he says.

NCGT and NC State Extension Offer Resources and Workshops on Collaborative Farming in NC

NC Growing Together and NC State Extension are partnering to offer training and resources to farmers and extension agents who are interested in exploring various types of collaborative farming structures  including cooperatives, limited liability companies, partnerships, corporations, and nonprofit associations.  

"Volume requirements of larger buyers are very often barriers to smaller-farm entry into the supply chain. Through collaboration farmers can pool supply, as well as share equipment, buy inputs in volume, and create a compelling brand," said NC Growing Together Project Director Rebecca Dunning.

A new report, Collaborative Farming in NC , explains the different forms of collaborative structures and provides the results of a 2017 study of collaborative farming in North Carolina.  The report was authored by Becky Bowen, J.D., Program Manager of NC State Extension's CultivateNC .

" Collaborative farming arrangements across North Carolina vary in type, purpose, size, and effectiveness.  No particular structure guarantees the potential for profitability.  Compatibility, equitable contribution of resources, proper planning, and when feasible, professional management, seem to be the keys to success," she says. 

In 2018, Bowen will be offering half-day workshops on Collaborative Farming in NC: When It Makes Sense to Partner with Others , sponsored by NCGT and co-facilitated by Carolina Common Enterprise, a USDA-supported cooperative development center for the Carolinas.
 
Workshop dates and locations:

Jan. 31 | Edgecombe Co. Cooperative Extension | 1- 4:30 pm

Feb. 5 | Bladen Co. Cooperative Extension | 1 - 4:30 pm
 
Feb. 7 | Buncombe Co. Cooperative Extension | 1- 4:30 pm
 
Feb. 9 | Richmond Co. Cooperative Extension | 1 - 4:30 pm
 
Feb. 12 | Forsyth Co. Cooperative Extension | 1 - 4:30 pm
 
The workshops are free, or $20 if you choose to arrive at noon for a local lunch preceding the workshop.  Download this flier for more information, and register online at 
http://go.ncsu.edu/grants-collaborations-workshop
For questions, contact Becky Bowen at [email protected] or (919) 628-4317.

Students: Apply Now for the 2018 NCGT Local Food Supply Chain Apprenticeship


Gain experience related to local food systems and supply chains while working with the organizations that are making food systems change happen in North Carolina!

2018 Apprenticeships are being offered at: 

  • Freshpoint Inc. (Raleigh-Durham)
  • Working Landscapes (Warrenton)
  • Farmer Foodshare (Durham)
  • Feast Down East (Burgaw)
  • Firsthand Foods (Durham)
  • TRACTOR Food and Farms (Burnsville)
  • Piedmont Food and Agricultural Processing Center (Hillsborough)
  • Lowes Foods (Winston-Salem)
  • Foodbuy (Charlotte)

For more information, please visit the NCGT website or download a printable flier.  

What kinds of projects do NCGT Apprentices do?  Find out here and here.
Project Contact Information

Nancy Creamer,  Co-Director of the Center for Environmental Farming Systems, NC State University; and Project Director, NC Growing Together,  [email protected] , 919-515-9447

Rebecca Dunning, NCGT Project Manager, [email protected], 919-389-2220
  
Laura Lauffer NCGT Extension and Outreach Program Manager,  [email protected] 919-444-1478

JJ Richardson, NCGT Website and Communications Coordinator,  [email protected], 919-889-8219 


This project is supported by the Agriculture and Food Research Initiative competitive grant no. 2013-68004-20363 of the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture. 
   USDA NIFA logo
© 2013-2017 NC Growing Together
www.ncgrowingtogether.org