I'll give you the benefit of the doubt that you didn't know that City of Everett is a
Massachusetts Gateway City.
Gateway cities have a population between 35k-250k, an average household income below the state average, and an average educational attainment (bachelor's degree or above) below the state average, among other characteristics. This means that a higher rate of Gateway City residents (including in Everett) may fall below the poverty line and/or depend on Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits for food. Because the City of Everett does not currently have a single supermarket within its borders*, large swaths of the city are considered a food desert and many residents, therefore, lack access to affordable fresh fruits and vegetables that they can use their SNAP benefits to purchase. (*Gateway Center's 'Target' on the southern edge of city limit
technically has a grocery store, but its limited transit access to majority car-less Everett households mean it's out of reach to residents that would benefit most from supermarket access. Chelsea's Market Basket is similarly on a city border, but still out of reach for many residents that need it. And Chelsea Stop & Shop just closed, so... shit)
Fortunately there is a community-based food justice organization--
Everett Community Growers--whose mission is 'to improve health and racial equity through urban agriculture, youth workforce development, and equitable policy change... that everyone in Everett should have access to healthy, affordable, culturally-appropriate food. They operate two community gardens, two community farms, and a farmstand. They are the only vendor in Everett to accept the state’s Healthy Incentives Program (HIP) which doubles residents’ SNAP dollars. And they also conduct community outreach, engagement and policy advocacy centered on racial, economic, and environmental justice.'
As someone who's supported and purchased from the Everett Community Growers, I want to take a moment to acknowledge how fucking incredible their work and other community grower organizations' work is to strengthening community, enhancing our cities' natural environments, and improving public health outcomes. If there's a destination in every community I've admired around the world--a place that captures what makes
this culture distinctive--it's the local farmer's market. Community Growers fulfill that goal.
While Everett's blessed with an active Community Growers organization for many months of the year, it is unfortunately burdened with New England winters and its farms do not produce for much of the year due to these elements. Also consequently, this means that many low-income residents that leverage SNAP/HIP benefits for locally-grown food access much of the year are quite literally left out in the cold when there's no place locally able to produce/sell to them. Climate-controlled freight farms and vertical farms, on the other hand, can grow multiple yields year round, including during the harsh winters. With this context, I hope you can appreciate why a hydroponic shipping container farm would be of such importance to a community that they'd write it into an MOA. It
is an infrastructure improvement. And as long as deep-pocketed investinfo on Everett, dshoost. ors have a seat at the table and are keen to be good neighbors, it is a
thoughtful commitment to have agreed to. Not a funny one.