This year’s Southeast Area Farmers Market will take place at Grand Rapids’ Joe Taylor Park. The market not only provides our Grand Rapids neighbors with fresh local produce but also provides other community organizations an opportunity to share their resources.
We are thrilled to have New City Farm join our community of market vendors this year. They will provide fresh produce grown right here on their farm in Grand Rapids. We welcome other local farms and growers to come vend as well.
If you would like to be a vendor at the 2025 Southeast Area Farmers Market, email SEAFM@OKTjustice.org.
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Food plants almost ready!
Blandford Farm timed the planting of OKT’s starter food plants so they’d be ready to go in the ground right around Memorial Day.
“We are right on track. We were able to get almost all the herbs to germinate as well,” says Elizabeth Visser, Blandford Farm Manager. “I still need to pot up the mustard greens. They grow fairly quickly, so I seeded them later than some of the other greens. All the plants will be ready to pick up during the last week of May.”
OKT will be in touch with this year’s growers to let them know when and where they can pick up plants or expect delivery.
Urban League of West Michigan Statement on the Mistrial in the Case of Christopher Schurr
The Urban League of West Michigan calls on the Kent County Prosecutor to swiftly retry the
murder case against former officer Christopher Schurr without delay.
On April 4, 2022, our community experienced a tragedy that forever changed the lives of the Lyoya family, the Grand Rapids Police Department, and the collective spirit of Grand Rapids. That day became a defining moment—testing our values, our institutions, and our commitment to justice.
The recent mistrial in the case of former police officer Christopher Schurr has laid bare a deep
and painful divide in our community. This fissure runs through the very foundation of a city
striving to become a place where all people, regardless of race, background, or circumstance, can
truly thrive.
For those who have long carried the burden of a criminal justice system that too often fails to
serve them, this mistrial is a devastating reminder of that reality. It represents not just a legal
failure but a profound moral one. Communities repeatedly asked to place their trust in the system
are once again left reeling—disillusioned, hurt, and retraumatized.
This is a grave injustice the Lyoya family must now bear—not only today, but for the rest of
their lives. It is a wound that also marks the conscience of every Grand Rapidian who believes in
the promise of justice. Until every system—education, health, housing, economic, and criminal
justice—works for all, our community cannot and will not thrive.
Let us not forget the words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to
justice everywhere.” An injustice to one is, indeed, an injustice to all.
The Urban League of West Michigan calls on the Kent County Prosecutor to swiftly retry the
murder case against former officer Christopher Schurr without delay. Additionally, we invite the
City of Grand Rapids Office of Oversight and Public Accountability (OPA) to an immediate and
transparent dialogue with us and the broader community. This conversation should focus on a
thorough examination of the training, policies, practices, and procedures currently in place
within the Grand Rapids Police Department – particularly in instances where these actions result
in a loss of life.
Our city’s future depends on the courage to confront hard truths and the will to make meaningful
changes. Justice delayed is justice denied—not just for one family, but for all of us.
FAMILIES AT RISK IN FEDERAL BUDGET DEBATE, ADVOCATES WARN
Advocates for immigrant families, health care, food security, and economic opportunity warned today that the federal budget debate in Congress threatens deep cuts to health care and social services for millions of Michigan residents in immigrant families. Spokespersons for the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center (MIRC), the Protecting Immigrant Families Coalition (PIF), Michigan Primary Care Association, Michigan League for Public Policy, and Food Bank Council of Michigan briefed Michigan journalists by teleconference.
“These cuts will impact immigrant families and communities across the state.” said Christine Sauvé, Policy, Engagement, and Communications Manager at the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center. “Immigrants are integral to Michigan’s social, cultural, and economic fabric and the proposed restrictions would hurt us all. We all benefit when more people have access to the care and support they need to thrive.”
“Policymakers need to understand that – in addition to the human consequences – these cuts will mean job losses, loss of needed services to keep folks well, and facility closures across our state, including areas already experiencing insufficient healthcare access,” said Jackie Chandler, Population Health Manager at the Michigan Primary Care Association.
“The Child Tax Credit and other anti-poverty measures drastically reduce child poverty, making for a more prosperous economic environment with lower public costs in the long term,” said Scott Preston, Senior Policy Analyst at the Michigan League for Public Policy. “Immigrants are important contributors to our state’s economy and the proposed cuts would simply make life harder for citizens who want to stay in Michigan and be part of our state’s future.”
“Denying SNAP to lawfully-present immigrants and U.S. citizens in immigrant families will drive up hunger across the state and undermine the economic stability of families, farms and other food producers, and neighborhood retailers across the state,” said Anna Almanza, Director of Public Policy & Government Relations, Food Bank Council of Michigan
“Congress should be looking for solutions to problems like unmet health care needs, hunger, and poverty, not making those problems worse,” said PIF Campaign Strategist Esther Reyes.
Community partners! Join us at the market!
The Southeast Area Farmers Market not only provides our Grand Rapids neighbors with fresh local produce but also provides other community organizations an opportunity to share their resources.
We have been thrilled to have the participation of the City of Grand Rapids, the Grand Rapids Fire Department, Planned Parenthood, the Grand Rapids Public Library, Friends of Grand Rapids Parks, Grand Rapids Red Project and many others over the years.
If your community organization would like to share resources during the upcoming market season, email SEAFM@OKTjustice.org.







Think spring! Think food gardens!
Check out the free OKT food growing guide! Growing Food, Eating Healthy, Living Sustainably
Would you like to grow your own food? Yes, it takes some work but the results are worth the effort. Food harvested from your own garden plot, raised bed, or containers offers more nutrients, taste, and convenience.
OKT’s free food growing guide gives you lots of tips on planting, maintaining, harvesting, and eating from your garden — like this chart that lays out when to plant what.
U.S. Senate Budget Plan Would Harm Millions of Michiganders and Deepen Wage Inequalities
The Michigan League for Public Policy is strongly denouncing the United States Senate’s new budget plan, which is predicted to pass this weekend and would create harmful consequences for Michiganders. Monique Stanton, MLPP president & CEO states:
“The Senate’s new budget plan is downright dangerous, and if passed this weekend as planned, will set the stage for a damaging tax and budget bill. It delivers massive tax breaks to millionaires, billionaires, and large corporations — and covers the cost in part by slashing essential programs like Medicaid and SNAP. In Michigan alone, 2.6 million residents rely on Medicaid — including over 1 million children — and more than 1.4 million Michiganders rely on SNAP. These cuts would lead to higher health care and food costs for families, increased financial hardship, and millions potentially losing health coverage.
Even with deep cuts, the tax breaks are so expensive that they will lead to a significant rise in the national deficit, increasing economic risks tied to unsustainable debt — all to benefit the wealthiest households.
It doesn’t have to be this way. There’s still time for Congress to change course. Lawmakers must honor their commitments to ease the burdens families face, not reshape the budget to serve those at the very top. A responsible plan would lower health care and grocery costs, expand the Child Tax Credit, and invest in working families — and ask corporations and the wealthy to pay their fair share through a more balanced tax policy.
Senate Republicans are using misleading tactics to obscure the truth about this budget. They’ve downplayed the cost of these tax cuts and hidden the full scope of planned reductions to Medicaid, food assistance, student loans and other critical programs. In reality, the budget would make college more expensive and take away essential supports from families the President once vowed to protect — all while delivering an average annual tax cut of $62,000 to households earning over $1 million, according to the Tax Policy Center.
The plan includes at least $5.3 trillion in tax breaks over the next nine years — $1.5 trillion more than the cost of extending the 2017 tax cuts — and that number could climb even higher with additional program cuts under consideration by the Senate Finance Committee.
What does that mean for Michigan? According to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, simply extending the 2017 tax cuts would give the richest 1% of Michiganders an average tax cut of $35,970 while the poorest 20%, who are already struggling to afford the basics, would receive an average tax cut of just $90. What’s worse is that we expect the plan to go beyond this — providing windfall tax breaks for wealthy Michiganders while making it harder for the rest of us to see a doctor, put food on our table and send our kids to school.
It’s becoming clearer and clearer. Many in Congress are embracing an agenda that threatens public services and undermines democratic processes. Alongside the budget, Republicans are advancing executive actions that unlawfully withhold congressionally approved funding, politicize and weaken the civil service, and erode institutions like the Social Security Administration and the Treasury Department — putting the privacy and stability of millions at risk. On top of this, the administration is pushing new, unilateral tariffs that will raise everyday costs for working families by hundreds or even thousands of dollars — easily wiping out any modest tax relief they might receive.
This budget plan — like so much of the current agenda — is upside down. It breaks promises, deepens the already massive income gap, and puts the interests of the wealthy above the needs of the nation. The American people deserve a plan that builds shared prosperity — not one that leaves families behind.”
Educating Teens About Food and the Farm Through New City Neighbors
Note! New City Farm will be our produce anchor at this year’s Southeast Area Farmers Market! Reposted from Rapid Growth Media.
This article is part of Rapid Growth’s Voices of Youth series, which features content created by Kent County youth in partnership with Rapid Growth staff mentors, as well as feature stories by adult writers that examine issues of importance to local youth.
Learning about nutrition, cooking, and food scarcity helps prepare youth for adult life and deepens their empathy. New City Neighbors, a Grand Rapids-based nonprofit, gives area teens that head start and connects them with impactful experiences.
With three farms across the area and a cafe to serve the community, kids learn agricultural skills and make food alongside their peers. Helping urban youth learn about agricultural development and preservation is key to NCN, which recently secured a five-acre urban space on Ball Avenue NE to expand.
Ricardo Tavárez is in his sixth year as NCN executive director. He hopes more inner-city teens can learn about producing food from farm to table.
“We take food for granted sometimes, and when our youth learn about food prep or about growing healthy food, they also learn about food scarcity in our community,” he says.
The work at NCN is not just about teaching about these real-world issues, it’s about supplying the community with food to eat — and healthy food, at that. Youth in the NCN program are helping families who need food get farm-to-table meals.
Nate Engle, of the Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (MDARD), sees three main benefits to fresh food from the farm being supplied to neighborhoods: economic impact, health benefits, and social aspect.
“We are what we eat, and if we eat more healthy foods, more often, chances are we’re comparatively healthier,” he says.
Recognizing how economic impact and social aspects intersect is also important.
“There’s a higher chance you know the person who delivers those fresh foods or knows the person that grows them, or you get them and then take them to your grandma or an elderly neighbor,” he says. “Food systems that are more local in nature strengthen local communities by building relationships.”
In essence, NCN empowers teens to create better relationships with their community. Tavárez agrees.
“Being able to bring healthy food to someone helps them build a relationship with the farmers who are actually growing the food,” he said.” There’s not a third party that’s selling them the food. They actually get to interact with the people who grew it.”
Why New City Neighbors is Youth-Oriented
Part of NCN’s mission is “empowering youth to reach their full potential.”
“We intentionally focus on youth because we believe that they’re not just the leaders of tomorrow, but they’re the leaders of today,” Tavárez says.
With the right resources, he says, youth can enact change.
“We believe that youth in our neighborhood have ideas that are worth listening to; that they can shape the community for the better; and that they often know more about the social issues that need to be changed in our community than we do. So we want to empower them to have a good starting place to tackle some of those issues and shape our community for the better,” he says.
Engle elaborates on how programs like those NCN offers can help the younger generation later in life.
“Agriculture and food also represent a pathway for youth to grow careers,” he says. “Young people can get training and higher education to become chemists, biologists, veterinarians, plant pathologists, soil scientists, agronomists, supply chain and logistics managers, or any number of other professions.”
These are just a few of the career options that benefit from the training that NCN gives its employees, whether they be farm apprentices or cafe workers. These opportunities soon will expand, as the recent purchase of urban farmland allows the organization to reach more inner-city teens and serve more of the community. NCN has already worked with over 200 youth employees, a number that will grow with this new development.
The Future of New City Neighbors
The Ball Avenue farm was only acquired last fall, but the second phase of the organization’s plan is already in motion.
The “On Solid Ground” campaign is now in its farm-development phase, where donations are used to buy agricultural equipment. By 2026, the goal is to have the space ready for the third phase, where a farm education center will be fully fitted to teach local youth about agriculture in an environmentally sustainable manner.
Tavárez hopes the community is ready for the space to be maintained as one of the last few urban green spaces in the Creston area.
“We’re very excited to develop [it], keep it green, and use it to take our youth empowerment to the next level,” he says. “We’re hoping to get a lot of excitement and energy from our community to continue supporting us.”
The benefits of this campaign don’t end there. Engle speaks to how important it is to conserve these spaces, and how Grand Rapids is at the forefront of urban agriculture development.
“Healthy urban places are symbiotic with healthy rural places,” he says. “If you have vibrant cities, you probably have vibrant rural communities outside them. We see challenges when we sprawl with our developments … We want dense urban cities in Michigan, and we want healthy rural cities and villages surrounded by productive farms and forestry land.”
Whether or not you are a teen, you can help NCN and preserve urban agriculture across the city. Engle recommends contacting the Urban Agriculture Committee and asking if you can attend a meeting. The Kent County Agricultural Preservation Board also holds meetings where you can get questions answered.
In addition to donating, you can volunteer at the New City Farm or become a shareholder and receive fresh, farm-grown vegetables. Current opportunities for youth include a farm apprentice program; applications are on NCN’s website.
Luke Fann is a sophomore at City High Middle School, where he has been an editor since 2022 and a journalist since 2021 for the school newspaper, The City Voice. He writes about current events and technology. He also enjoys creative writing, especially fantasy and sci-fi. Luke has won several awards for his writing at MSU’s MIPA Summer Journalism Workshop for both Creative Storytelling and the Art of Storytelling.
OKT’s Program for Growth at four local schools
Our Kitchen Table is thrilled to announce that we will be growing healthy organic food with more schools this spring, summer and fall. In addition to Glenwood Elementary School in Kentwood and Campus Elementary School in Grand Rapids, we will be back at Grand Rapids Martin Luther King Jr. Leadership Academy and, for the first time, Grand Rapids Dickinson Elementary.
The Program for Growth not only enlists students in gardening. Their parents and caregivers are encouraged to volunteer in the garden and attend classes on healthy eating led by a registered dietitian. With direction from OKT peer garden coach Belinda Henderson, families who chose to are provided with organic food plants, soil, containers or raised beds, and coaching so they can grow their own food at home as well.







