Abstract
Greater Twin Cities United Way (GTCUW), Minnesota’s largest nongovernmental social services funder, connects local people and resources to change systems that limit our potential. Hunger and food insecurity require a spectrum of holistic responses that address emergency and root causes, while advancing long-term solutions for individuals, families, communities, and systems. To that end, GTCUW launched Full Lives, an innovative grantmaking strategy fostering a healthy and equitable community food system where all residents can thrive. This two-year, US$1.5 million effort employs a place-based approach to community and economic development to reduce food insecurity by improving food access, food affordability, and food justice for a low-income Minneapolis neighborhood facing systemic food security issues. Full Lives grantees focus on diverse aspects of the local supply chain that strengthen North Minneapolis’s local food system. Full Lives further augments this effort through grantee learning focused on increased organizational capacity and strengthened connections among grantee organizations, with a cross-cutting theme of community development. GTCUW partners with local technical assistance providers to implement flexible, innovative, responsive, and targeted capacity-building strategies and services. This strategic investment generates cross-agency collaboration, active networking, organizational development, and enhanced food systems technical expertise. A robust evaluation—including qualitative and quantitative elements—reveals successes, challenges, and lessons learned from the design and execution of these capacity-building strategies. Practice and measurement of this grantee capacity-building investment suggests strategies and considerations for partnership development, incorporation of grantee and community voice in planning, and delivery of ongoing educational activities for grantees. GTCUW would like to thank the General Mills Foundation for its generous support in making this work possible.
Highlights
Greater Twin Cities United Way (GTCUW), Minnesota’s largest nongovernmental social services funder, connects local people and resources to change systems that limit our potential
A * Corresponding author: Alyssa Banks is a program officer on the Innovation team at the Greater Twin Cities United Way, where she manages the Full Lives grant program and a grant portfolio focused on strengthening local food security across the Twin Cities metropolitan area
Local economic and community development focused on community food systems as a grantmaking strategy shifts the emphasis from addressing individual need to a community-scaled, long-term approach
Summary
Greater Twin Cities United Way (GTCUW), Minnesota’s largest nongovernmental social services funder, connects local people and resources to change systems that limit our potential. Building grantee capacity as a core strategy to improve local food systems This two-year, US$1.5 million effort employs a place-based approach to community and economic development to reduce food insecurity by improving food access, food affordability, and food justice for a low-income Minneapolis neighborhood facing systemic food security issues.
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