Watershed Fund: Difference between revisions

From Neighborhood Economics
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(32 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Crowd funding through benefit dinners at restaurants for farm to table farmers, and farm dinners for farmers who don’t sell to restaurants.
[[Neighborhood Economics]] has built a fund with [[Eagle Market Streets]] CDC to do zero interest small expansion $10,000 philanthropic investment (give to invest) loans from the Impact Assets [[CataCap]] platform for local farm to table farmers including [[Rayburn Farms]] and [[Belly Full Plants Nursery]] and student entrepreneurs in the [[Warren Wilson Student Entrepreneur pilot project]] from [[Warren Wilson]].
https://neighborhoodeconomics.org/wiki/index.php/Watershed_Fund


This where I will try to outline the emerging partnership and stakeholder network around the Watershed Fund on this wiki. I use wikis for outlining processes and players and the ecosystem. Feel free to add to it or edit it, if that’s your preference, but this will help me keep up to date on the network’s growth and partnership engagement. No need to pay it any attention if you don’t want to. It’s a tool I use at this phase of a multi stake holder engagement, where we are coming to market with each other, in a sense, and linking our brands, for this project, and maybe also in Greenville, SC and other places.


The product we at Neighborhood Economics will build to enhance the zero interest investment is a field guide to engaging in the food system in your watershed. There will also be a version for faith communities. We hope to link with Abundance Capital’s pool of donors who believe in giving to invest for justice. The dinners will be promoted by jb media. We will produce the graphics and the content to accompany the promotion, they will do the social media, using our logos, etc


I will start listing players and organizations and partners here and have each one be their own page, to start. I am excited that [[Veronika Gunter]] is our project manager from JB Media. She’s done big things and a diverse number of interesting and good things. [[Margaret Gifford]], with her partner Mike Gatchell at Abundance Capital have the nation’s only locally focuses, justice focused donor advised fund platform. Margaret has deep knowledge of food investing.


[[Stephanie Swepson Twitty]] is in this project, entering the market with the Watershed Fund with Neighborhood Economics producing an engagement field guide to the food system in your watershed to help new donors give to invest more in their local community using the portal of the benefit dinners for farm to table restaurants with their farmers
[[Stephanie Swepson Twitty]] and Eagle will manage the fund on the [[CataCap]] platform and take a management fee for due diligence and underwriting. [[Neighborhood Economics]] gets a part of the management fee for engagement and business development. The college will get a part of the management fee for providing technical assistace to the student entrepreneurs.
[[partners in the existing farm system]]
 
 
{{backlinks}}

Latest revision as of 11:17, 10 September 2024

Neighborhood Economics has built a fund with Eagle Market Streets CDC to do zero interest small expansion $10,000 philanthropic investment (give to invest) loans from the Impact Assets CataCap platform for local farm to table farmers including Rayburn Farms and Belly Full Plants Nursery and student entrepreneurs in the Warren Wilson Student Entrepreneur pilot project from Warren Wilson.



Stephanie Swepson Twitty and Eagle will manage the fund on the CataCap platform and take a management fee for due diligence and underwriting. Neighborhood Economics gets a part of the management fee for engagement and business development. The college will get a part of the management fee for providing technical assistace to the student entrepreneurs. partners in the existing farm system


Links to this page