Balancing Social Values with Economic Realities

Farmer Experience with a Cost-offset CSA

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5304/jafscd.2020.094.004

Keywords:

Cost-Offset CSA, Community Supported Agriculture, Entrepreneurship, Farmer Profitability, Nutrition Incentives, Subsidized Direct-to-Consumer

Abstract

Some farmers are offering subsidized or “cost-offset” community supported agriculture (CO-CSA) shares as a strategy to counter market saturation and improve low-income families’ access to fresh local foods. However, little is known about farmers’ experiences with this model, particularly in regard to the balance between additional resources required for adoption and subsequent contributions to farm revenue. As part of the Farm Fresh Foods for Healthy Kids Study of the impact of a CO-CSA on dietary behaviors in low-income families, we conducted qualitative interviews with 12 farmers across four states after the first and the third years of CO-CSA implementation. We explored these data to understand what accommodations farmers provided to low-income families, the benefits and challenges of implementing the CO-CSA model, and farmers’ perceptions of its impact on cash flow and profitability. We found that farmers selected pick-up locations that met CO-CSA members’ needs, were responsive to members’ food preferences in selecting CSA contents, and allowed for late payments and pickups, though sometimes this placed an additional burden on farmers’ time and resources. Additionally, weekly payment transactions led to increased recordkeeping. Despite its challenges, most farmers said CO-CSA adoption was a worthwhile addition to their business model. Expanding food access through this mechanism may become more sustainable with the additional support of innovative policies like eased land-use restrictions, operational models, and community strategies to fund and operate CO-CSA programs. This is an area ripe for future research, as there is little documentation on both single farm and multifarm CO-CSA operations.

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Author Biographies

Marilyn Sitaker, The Evergreen State College

Resource Faculty, Ecological Agriculture and Food Systems

Mackenzie McCall, The Evergreen State College

Research Specialist, Ecological Agriculture and Food Systems

Emily H. Belarmino, University of Vermont

Assistant Professor, Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences

Weiwei Wang, University of Vermont

Research Specialist, Department of Community Development and Applied Economics

Jane Kolodinsky, University of Vermont

Professor, Department of Community Development and Applied Economics

Florence Becot, University of Vermont

Research Specialist. Dr. Becot is now Associate Research Scientist, National Farm Medicine Center at the Marshfield Clinic Research Institute.

Jared T. McGuirt, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Assistant Professor, Department of Nutrition

Alice S. Ammerman, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Professor, Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health; and Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention

Stephanie B. Jilcott Pitts, East Carolina University

Associate Professor, Brody School of Medicine

Rebecca A. Seguin-Fowler, Texas A&M University

Associate Professor, Department of Nutrition & Food Science

University of Vermont Agriculture & Life Sciences logo

Published

2020-07-22

How to Cite

Sitaker, M., McCall, M., Belarmino, E., Wang, W., Kolodinsky, J., Becot, F., McGuirt, J., Ammerman, A., Jilcott Pitts, S., & Seguin-Fowler, R. (2020). Balancing Social Values with Economic Realities: Farmer Experience with a Cost-offset CSA. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development, 9(4), 29–43. https://doi.org/10.5304/jafscd.2020.094.004

Issue

Section

More Than Value$ in the Food System Peer-reviewed Papers