“It’s not just about farming. There is a legacy in land ownership. It’s a continuation of generational wealth building.” – Tepfirah Rushdan
Brenda Sharpe of Detroit has had a personal garden for years, but for the last two she has grown a community garden on lots adjacent to her westside home with hopes of expanding into an urban farm. Red tape with the city has delayed her from moving forward with that aspiration, but thanks to the Detroit Black Farmer Land Fund, she will be able to get the help she needs.
Sharpe is one of 30 awardees granted money from the Detroit Black Farmer Land Fund after its overwhelmingly successful fundraising campaign that launched last June. The goal was to raise $5,000. To date, the fund has raised $65,000, said Tepfirah Rushdan, Keep Growing Detroit co-director and initiator of the campaign to help Black farmers like Sharpe who have been land-insecure to purchase land.
“Black farmers are definitely at a disadvantage because of lack of access to capital,” Rushdan said. “I saw this disparity with ready cash to purchase land. I just worry that farmers are going to be priced out.”
The hope is that being priced out won’t be the case for fund awardees. Rushdan enlisted other campaign partners, Detroit Black Community Food Security Network Board Members Erin Bevel and Shakara Tyler and Jerry Hebron, executive director of Oakland Avenue Farms, to review and score fund applications.
After reviewing 60 applicants, 30 emerged based on factors that included their experience, relationship with the community where they will purchase land, site plan and knowledge about the land they will purchase. The fund partners will also help award winners with technical assistance, like navigating the purchasing process.
That’s good news to Sharpe, who wants to buy city-owned land across the street from her house for larger-scale growing and to keep bees to better serve her community.
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“We wanted to do this as a way to bring something back to the community, to stop the blight,” Sharpe said, noting blocks of unoccupied land. “We’ve turned it into a little something in a corner of nothing.”
Connection is a key ideal behind the fund. “It’s not just about farming,” Rushdan said. “There is a legacy in land ownership. It’s a continuation of generational wealth building.”
Because of the success and need for the fund, the partners plan to continue it. Hebron said: “We are making a difference and coming back next year bigger and better.”
Winners
1. Olivia Hubert
2. Travis Peters
3. Roxanne and Donnie Jones
4. Marc Peeples
5. Willie Patmon
6. Deena Allen
7. Michael Morris Erin Cole
8. Akello Karamoko
9. Brenda Foster
10. Tracy Harris
11. Iman Payne
12. Dazmonique Carr
13. Ozie Carlisle
14. Linda Kay Pruitt
15. Piper Carter
16. Winnie Atieno Nyar Kasagam Imbuchi
17. Nan Chang Springer
18. Yusef Shakur
19. Tharmond Ligon
20. Karen Knox
21. Marion Rutland
22. Ebony Williams
23. Tamara Toole
24. Thesnelia Tansil
25. Rhea McCauley
26. Dana Dacres
27. Detra Ward
28. Omar McCray
29. Isha Johnson
30. Patrice Brown
This piece was produced with the partnership and support of the Detroit Equity Action Lab Race and Justice Media Collaboration at Wayne State University to support Black, Indigenous, or people of color (BIPOC) journalists freelance journalists from marginalized communities and the Solutions Journalism Network.