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Driftless Region Food & Farm Project

The Driftless Region Food & Farm Project aims to bridge the gap between farmers and consumers in the region. We provide support and resources to farmers in scaling up production and accessing markets while educating them on developing micro-packing houses and pick-up points. Our goal is to link farmers with buyers, such as grocery stores, foodservice distributors, schools, and restaurants, to maximize the return for the goods they produce.

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Driftless Region Food & Farm Project

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  1. Driftless Region Food & Farm Project

  2. Way Back When Farmers Independent Grocery Store Independent Restaurant Consumers

  3. Shipper Structure Shipper Grower Grower Grower

  4. Shipper Diagram Grower Shipper Grocery Stores with Warehouses and Distributors Wholesalers Foodservice Distributors

  5. Traditional and Direct-to-Consumer Local Food Sales 2012 $6.1 Billion in Local Food Sales 2014 $12 Billion in Local Food Sales

  6. Market Breakdown • 163,675 farms in U.S. (7.8 %) were marketing food locally • 70% marketed direct-to-consumer • 30% marketed through traditional market channels Source: USDA, 2012

  7. Number of Farms 2008/2011 2012 Direct to Consumer 114,001 115,304 Direct/Wholesale 21,201 25,756 Wholesale 11,036 22,615 Source: USDA—Trends in U.S. Local and Regional Food Systems

  8. The demand for locally grown at grocery stores and foodservice outlets has grown faster than the number of farmers to supply them

  9. Biggest Challenges There is inadequate access to inputs, labor, finance and storage, infrastructure, and lack of know how in scaling up production and market access.

  10. Market Place Challenges Meeting buyer requirements for product volume, quality, consistency, variety, cold-chain management, certified food safety plans, insurance, extended availability, lack of distribution, processing and marketing infrastructure

  11. Challenges • Traffic congestion and navigation of the city • High cost of multiple small quantity deliveries • Lack of understanding of true cost of transportation • Must meet orders and delivery deadlines • Volume and quality requirements

  12. Challenges • May need standard sizes and grades, labeling, packaging, and PLU/UPC codes • Usually requires GAP certification, product liability insurance, and follow FSMA • Cold-chain management • Lack of distribution know-how • Regulatory

  13. What are We Doing About It? • Linking farmers up with buyers 600 farmers with over 75 buyers • Bringing the know-how to Illinois to scale up • Educating our farmers on how to develop micro-packing houses and pick-up points • Linking with like kind

  14. Know How Connections Maximize the return they receive for the goods they produce! Functions • Transport • Process • Grade • Add value • Research • Distribute • Bargain • Sell • Marketing Farmer Products Farmer Benefits

  15. Food Hub Diagram Wholesalers, Grocery Stores, Foodservice Distributors Grower Local Food Hub Schools & Universities Independent Food stores Restaurants

  16. Since 2006, the number of food hubs has increased 288%

  17. Aggregation and Distribution Warehouses • Food hubs serve as a drop-off point for multiple farmers • Serve as a pick-up point for market channel trucking • Coordinates the aggregation, distribution and marketing of foods from multiple farmers to multiple markets • Coordinating all aspects of local food supply chain logistics • Identifying markets for farmers • Coordinating transportation • Managing the product location logistics • Effectively matching supply with demand • Determining pricing and processes invoicing • Maintaining quality and food safety assurances

  18. The Sorting, Grading and Packing Process • Produce is delivered in picking containers • Transported to a packing house (if not field packed) • Receiving • Cleaning • Sorting • Grading • Sizing • Packing • Produce workers need to be knowledgeable regarding produce defects, grade, size requirements, and packing methods

  19. Alternate uses for ROI What to do with the facility the rest of the year? • Cross docking • other farm products • transportation companies • food products • Storage space rental • Create sales on seasonal items • Create value added opportunities from same crop with alternating seasons

  20. Group Gap Audits Some companies are paying or off setting the cost of group audits to assist several farmers that are willing to come together and work together

  21. Cynthia HaskinsManager of Business Development and ComplianceIllinois Farm Bureau309 557-2155chaskins@ilfb.org

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