Category: Partner Spotlights

Building community through food in southern Colorado

Greta Allen, the Blueprint’s Policy Manager, recently visited the Pueblo Food Project and RMSER in Pueblo County in late August. She also traveled to Prowers County to make a presentation and meet with Lamar Unidos. 

Michelle Ray, the Blueprint’s Visibility Manager who’s based in Colorado Springs, is becoming more active with the Southeast Food Coalition. In addition to attending coalition meetings, she recently volunteered at Solid Rock Community Development Corporation’s free farmers market and helped facilitate a small-group conversation around local food access during a community dinner at Food to Power. 

Find out a little more about each group’s efforts to build community and address hunger locally.

Read More >

Connecting community to traditional foods, strengthening local food systems in southwestern Colorado

As part of our work, program staff for the Colorado Blueprint to End Hunger find it important to visit and connect with network partners right in their communities. We want to see what’s happening locally – especially the great work being done by community coalitions and organizations.

Dana Wood, the Blueprint’s Community Investment Manager, recently visited with recipients of Food Pantry Assistance Grants in southwestern Colorado. This included the Montezuma School to Farm Project and Pine River Shares in Bayfield, along with a joint food distribution by Good Sam’s Food Pantry and Dolores Family Project in Cortez.

Read More >

Grand Junction food bank earns coveted chance to improve WIC engagement

It’s a known challenge within the Women, Infants and Children (WIC) program in most communities. How do we get more people eligible for the program to actually use it?

The Community Food Bank of Grand Junction is tackling that question with a significant grant from the USDA. One of only 36 organizations selected to participate in the work, the food bank is certainly one of the smallest and also one of the few in a more rural part of the country.

Read More >

Youth-powered nonprofit serves up food, community, and belonging in northeastern Colorado

Children flocked to a neighborhood playground in Fort Morgan last Friday afternoon. Young adults wearing bright blue T-shirts, denoting them as staff for Kids at Their Best, were already on-site, getting ready to serve lunch and connect with any kid or teen who came. And they showed up for fun and food.

“It’s all about solving issues but also having fun,” shared Jodi Walker, founder and executive director for Kids at Their Best.

Read More >

Urban farmer expands work to embrace community

What started as a way for James Grevious to spend more quality time with his kids has grown into a fledgling non-profit, Urban Symbiosis, with the ambitious mission of becoming an urban farm incubator, fresh food provider, and economic engine for the Aurora community.

It all began with too many zucchinis, tomatoes, and leafy greens.

The initial group, made up of Grevious’ family and a few additional local kids, adopted the name Rebels in the Garden to describe their efforts to grow food for their families. They found that their plan to sell excess fresh food from their front yard — lemon aide-stand style — was met with an unexpected level of interest and need.

Read More >

Honoring Juneteenth: Andrea shares her story, her community

Last week on Juneteenth, Andrea Loudd shared her story and her community during Workgroup 2/3’s Liderazgo Comunitario (Community Leadership) workshop. It’s a powerful reminder of the racial disparities that still exist since the emancipation of Black slaves in the U.S. on June 19, 1865 – and why the Blueprint is committed to equity and being community-centered in its work to address hunger across Colorado. 

Her words and leadership inspire others to imagine a community without hunger, and we’re here to help amplify community voices like Andrea’s.

Read More >

Food to Power celebrates one year of Hillside Hub connecting community to needed and preferred foods

One year ago, Food to Power opened its Hillside Hub in southeast Colorado Springs to meet the needs of its local community with a no-cost grocery and urban farm that supplies some of their store’s healthy food options.
People have always asked for a grocery store in the Hillside community, and this fresh-food access point is needed now more (than) ever,” shared Executive Director Patience Kabwasa.

Read More >

Denver non-profit connects teens to a more joyful life

At Colorado Circles for Change, the focus is connecting young people to their sacred self.
Because that is the mission, the organization’s leaders soon realized that this type of self-exploration and actualization wasn’t possible until the young people had the basics. And one of the most essential was food. “We know that in our programs, our youth can’t focus on the larger goals if they don’t have access to nutritious food,” said Frida Soto, the organization’s lead program manager. “So we started with snacks and then meals.”

Read More >

Nederland Food Pantry keeps it fresh and local

When you visit the Nederland Food Pantry, you might be struck by how much of the pantry space and surrounding land is dedicated to food production and display. That’s intentional.

Over the last several years, the pantry has worked hard to produce food on the land around the pantry building, which is an old school.

Read More >
Scroll to Top