ARC Funding Includes Agriculture, Outdoor Trails & Craft Beer Tourism

According to a press release from the Appalachian Regional Commission, $22.8 million is being awarded to 33 projects in the Appalachian region.

The funding is part of the ARC’s POWER program, an initiative that awards federal funding for coal impacted communities to help them create jobs.

Some of the projects that received awards are in West Virginia, including farming projects, like the West Virginia Food & Farm Coalition and Grow Ohio Valley in Wheeling.

Executive Director and founder of Grow Ohio Valley, Danny Swan, said his organization wants to improve the economy of coal-impacted communities throughout the Northern Panhandle by increasing market opportunities for farmers throughout the region. 

“Wheeling eats 700 million dollars worth of food a year. If Wheeling shifted ten percent of its eating toward products that were grown in and around Wheeling, it would inject 35 million dollars into the economy via local food development.”

Other projects receiving funding include Marshall University Research Corporation, which is using the money for a Craft Beer and Spirit Trail project, and the New River Gorge Trail Alliance, to expand an outdoor tourism project centered around outdoor hiking trails.

According to the ARC, the 33 awards are projected to create or retain nearly 1,000 jobs, some of which are designated to go to people in addiction recovery who are trying to reenter the workforce.

In W.Va., Small Farmers Face Tough Odds as One Project Aims to Help

This story is part of an episode of Inside Appalachia about projects aimed at spurring job growth in Appalachia.

On a recent Monday morning, as the rising sun burns off the low-hanging fog and fishermen haul in their morning catches from the Greenbrier River, at Sprouting Farms, the day is well underway.

Produce has been harvested and safely stored in a giant refrigerator. Employees are packaging cherry tomatoes into plastic clamshells, activities you might find at any of the farms that dot the Greenbrier Valley.

But while the daily tasks are handled at this production-scale vegetable farm, the crux of Sprouting Farms’ mission goes beyond the fields at hand.  

Credit Brittany Patterson / WVPB
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High tunnels can be rented for $30 per month at Sprouting Farms in Talcott, WV.

“Our goal is to not just make this site work, but the whole regional food system work, and we have lots of farmers and partners who are interested in making that happen,” says Sprouting Farms project Director Fritz Boettner.

In 2017, Sprouting Farms received a $1.5 million grant from the Appalachian Regional Commission. The project was an inaugural recipient of ARC’s POWER initiative, which provides federal dollars to coal-impacted communities. The goal is to diversity and help grow these economies.

Sprouting Farms aims to boost the reach of small-scale agriculture in the eastern and southern parts of West Virginia by training new farmers and providing inexpensive land and tools for budding agriculturalists. During the project’s first year, the team quickly realized to make local food production a bustling economy of scale in a state with challenging topography and a spread-out population, they needed to boost access to markets — everything from the more traditional farmer’s markets to the wholesale level, including getting more local food in restaurants and grocery stores.

“The demand is there. I’ve never really had that issue,” Boettner says. “It’s just how do we get supply and demand a lineup and how do we get the infrastructure in the middle to sort of pull it all together.”

Credit Brittany Patterson / WVPB
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Tomatoes are just one of the many things grown at Sprouting Farms.

On a recent tour of the 83-acre farm, Boettner explains how Sprouting Farms is trying to break down barriers — physical, financial and market-based — so farmers can be successful in West Virginia.

Outside of the farm’s faded red barn, a row of white plastic covered greenhouses, or high tunnels, are clearly visible. Black plastic tarp is also used on some parts of the farm.

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The seed starting greenhouse is one tool available to renters at Sprouting Farms.

Some of the 30 greenhouses are used by Sprouting Farms itself, but others are rented by local farmers who may not have the space or ability to invest thousands of dollars into the equipment needed to farm in this way. 

One high tunnel immediately sticks out. An abundance of bright pink and yellow flowers seem to dance inside. Sunflowers peak out merrily from the back. This monthly renter is one of the farm’s first. Now in her second year,  renting offers the opportunity to grow a business without making costly upfront investments, Boettner says.   

“Here we’re not even talking about food,” he says. “She rents it and has a cut-flower business. She grows flowers for weddings and restaurants and things like that.”

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One renter at Sprouting Farms uses her high tunnel to run a cut flower business.

Renters pay $30 per month for a 30-by-100-foot high tunnel. That includes electricity and water. For a few dollars more, they can use the farm’s tools, including the tractor.

But what if you want to be a farmer, but don’t know how?

Training the Next Generation

Beckley resident Ruby Daniels came to Sprouting Farms in March to participate in the project’s apprenticeship program.

Daniels’ family history is steeped in farming. Her great-grandfather was a slave who came to West Virginia to cut coal out of the seams before that job was done by machines. After he was injured, the family ran an orchard and a restaurant in the area.

Daniels has a master’s degree in therapeutic herbalism, and owning her own farm has long been a dream, but she says she lacked some of the production planning expertise.

“I didn’t know how to figure out the numbers,” she says, standing in the 200-square-foot greenhouse she shares. “How do I figure out if I want to sell 20 pounds, how do I figure out how many plants do I need? This was a good program for that.”

Credit Brittany Patterson / WVPB
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WVPB
Daniels grows herbs, beans and other things in the high tunnel she shares.

Daniels makes herbal teas and tinctures with the herbs she grows and says Sprouting Farms has given her the tools she needs to expand.

“This is a good farm for teaching an apprentice because you see things,” she says. “And everybody does farming different.”

Sprouting Farms’ decision to both be a fully operational production farm and offer education program is intentional. Boettner says by running their own farm, the team can workshop the best ways to grow on a larger scale in West Virginia, which doesn’t have big swaths of flat land like the Midwest or California.

The farmers who rent or train here also benefit from having the staff and tools on site, he adds.

“One day I could say, ‘You know, rent two greenhouses and here’s an acre and you can make a living doing it,’” he says. “The hope would be one day that would be possible. Not only like, you can do that, but here’s exactly what you know, you could grow right now in order to do that and get an offer that assistance with business planning and so forth.”

Creating New Markets

Boettner is a West Virginia native and no stranger to farming. He grew up in Charleston, but spent a lot of time at his grandparent’s farm in Virginia. He says he always knew he wanted to be a farmer.

“I’m a West Virginian, and I don’t know — it’s like everybody always wants to come back, but opportunities aren’t flourishing,” he says. “And I also believe in trying to make things better than when I started.” 

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Sprouting Farms Director Fritz Boettner poses.

After spending some time in Colorado, Boettner did move back. He co-founded a consulting firm called Downstream Strategies. Clients began hiring him to look into different economic development opportunities for West Virginia. One that came up a lot was agriculture.

At some point he and his business partner decided to take the thought experiments to the fields.  Using a grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, they crafted a business plan. Then, they heard about the ARC grant.

“Right now we need to be that catalyst and I think we need to be some of those risk takers,” he says. “And to me, that’s what the investment of the ARC grant is, to try to build something that does not exist currently and it’s hard to do that.”

Marshall University’s Robert C Byrd Institute partnered with the project for the ARC grant. While it has helped launch Sprouting Farms, Boettner says there’s still a big obstacle before agriculture is a viable economy here.

“We know that here the markets are a challenge,” he says.  

West Virginia leads the nation in small farms. Of the more than 20,000 farms here, 97 percent of them are considered small and 93 percent are family-owned, according to the USDA. Most vegetable farmers in the state gross ring less than $50,000 a year, and once expenses are accounted for, it’s hardly a good living. Selling more produce, or higher-value produce, to restaurants or grocery stores, could help.

That’s why Sprouting Farms started a food hub, Greenbrier Valley Grown. Food hubs are a centralized location where farmers can bring their food for processing and to go to market. They become the middleman. Farmers tell the hub what they have to sell. The hub aggregates it and delivers it to buyers. A restaurant might be getting squash from four different farms, but it’s delivered by just one entity: The hub.

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The refrigerated truck owned by the Greenbrier Valley Grown food hub is used to transport food from the eastern part of the state to customers in Charleston, including at the Capitol Market.

Todd Schmidt, an associate professor at Cornell University who studies agribusiness development in rural communities, says food hubs are growing in popularity across the country as more restaurants, grocery stores and other institutions seek more local food, because increasingly their customers ask for it.

“The market access issue, particularly in thinking about collaborative marketing operations, cooperatives, food hubs is something that is, that is providing beneficial to small-scale producers,” he says.

‘Helping Each Other Out’

Having access to a food hub has benefited Roger Dolan, who owns The Wild Bean in downtown Lewisburg. The hip coffee shop also serves vegetarian fare and does a rocking trade in smoothies.

Dolan says he has always tried to source as much of the produce The Wild Bean uses locally, but says it was hard juggling communications with multiple farms to get what he needed. Then he found a food hub and, despite an occasional produce shortage, he says it’s a boon to business to be able to advertise the restaurant uses locally-sourced produce.

“We’re putting money right back into our local economy by supporting local farmers that are going to come to our shop and spend their money,” he says. “It’s like a cycle, we’re each helping each other out.”

This fall, the two largest food hubs in the southern and eastern portions of West Virginia are converging. Sprouting Farms’ Greenbrier Valley Grown and ReFresh Appalachia’s food hub are joining with other large producers and growers’ groups under the umbrella organization, the Turnrow Appalachian Farm Collective.

“We’re trying to achieve some economies of scale here and hopefully to get West Virginia agriculture products into bigger markets,” says Brandon Dennison, the founder of the Coalfield Development Corporation, which runs farmer training program ReFresh Appalachia

The West Virginia Department of Agriculture estimates West Virginians consume $8 billion of food annually but the state only produces $800 million. If the new combined food hub can boost the amount of locally produced food bought by West Virginians by just a few percentage points, it could have big returns, says Jim Matson, an agricultural economist based in South Carolina.

“We’re not trying to replace every amount of food that comes in there with local food in most cases,” he says. “We’re just trying to add a little bit to it that can help to support these local families, add to local communities.”

Just the Beginning

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WVPB
Sprouting Farms in Talcott, WV.

Back at the farm, Boettner and I climb to the top of a hill to get the birds-eye view of Sprouting Farms.

As we look out over the land, dotted with white covered high tunnels, he reflects on the work they’ve accomplished so far.

“I’m happy with the progress we’ve made, absolutely, but I also know there’s an extremely long way to go,” he says laughing.

Boettner says as the project goes into its second year, it does so with more data and feedback on what has worked so far, and what hasn’t. One thing he doesn’t question is the appetite for more local food. 

Sprouting Farms has two more years of federal funding from the ARC for the first phrase of the project. They’re hoping that in the meantime, they can find a way to be more self-sustaining, bringing a profit to their organization, to continue after the grant runs out.

Programs in Coal Communities Get Infusion of Money

Officials from the Appalachian Regional Commission and the United States Economic Development Administration visited Huntington this week to announce millions of dollars in funding for Appalachian communities struggling with the effects of coal’s decline.

The funding, 38.8 million dollars in total, was awarded to 29 projects throughout Appalachia to stimulate economies in coal communities. The money was awarded through an application process. The awards were made as part of President Barack Obama’s Partnerships for Opportunity and Workforce and Economic Revitalization, or the POWER Initiative.

The initiative is a multi-agency effort to pair federal economic and workforce development resources to communities and workers who have been affected by job losses in coal mining and coal power plant operations.

The day started with a roundtable at the Coalfield Development Corporation in Huntington to discuss what these communities need. Among the wishes were improved infrastructure that included broadband and improved roadways allowing for more access. 

The financial award was announced later in the Central City neighborhood of Huntington. Jay Williams is the U.S. Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Economic Development. 

“To have an opportunity to work on behalf of the president, on behalf of this administration to help bring resources to help those communities transition is an honor and it’s inspiring,” Williams said. “And the federal government is in itself not going to be enough, it’s really the local stake holders and local collaborations that make this successful, so just to be a small part of that, I feel at home and I’m inspired and excited about what we’re seeing here on the ground.”

Credit Clark Davis / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Round-table discussion held by the Appalachian Regional Commission at the Coalfield Development Corporation’s West Edge Building.

West Virginia had 13 different programs receive money, the most of any state. Governor Earl Ray Tomblin said the grants can give the state a shot in the arm.

“Lots of worthwhile projects, from water systems in Mercer County, from the money to study the feasibility of the Hobet development site in Boone and Lincoln counties,” Tomblin said. “There is lots of training programs teaching people how to be entrepreneurs, helping them get up and get in businesses, so it’s really going to be the start of a great thing for West Virginia.”

Among the programs to receive funds were the Coalfield Development Corporation in West Virginia and the University of Pikeville in Kentucky for its Kentucky College of Optometry program. The Leveraging Innovation Gateways and Hubs Toward Sustainability at Ohio University was one of the major award recipients in Ohio. 

According to a news release, the investments are anticipated to create or retain more than 3,400 jobs in agriculture, technology, entrepreneurship, manufacturing and other sectors in Appalachia’s coal-impacted communities. The Appalachian Regional Commission also says the awards have attracted an additional 66.9 million dollars in leveraged investments from other public and private partners.

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