BUSINESS New Farmer’s Market Slated for Ward 8 James Wright WI Staff Writer A new farmer's market plans to open May 7 in Southeast plans to offer more than 30 produce and food vendors and offer specialty and prepared goods. Thanks to the support of developers Jair Lynch Real Estate Partners and JBG Smith, the Half Street Central Farm Market will open in the vicinity of Nationals Park to provide customers with healthy food choices and tips on nutritionally living. "In a time when our country is still grappling with the impact of the pandemic, we believe it's important to provide more opportunity for small businesses to succeed," said Anthony Startt, director investments of Jair Lynch. “The partnership with Central Farm Markets will help farmers, crafters and small businesses reach new
customers while providing fresh, local and sustainable food and products to a neighborhood known for its love of food, entertainment and sports.” The development partners have managed farmer's markets for more than 15 years in the Washington-are locations such as Bethesda and Rockville in neighboring Montgomery County, Maryland, and Falls Church, Virginia. The market will run from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. every Saturday until just before the Christmas holiday. In addition to fruits and vegetables and meats and poultry, seafood, ice cream, teas, breads and baked goods will be available to customers. Mitchell Berliner, the owner and founder of Central Farm Markets, said he and his partner, Debra Moser, are excited about their new operation. “We are really looking forward to bringing the best quality produce and
5 A rendering of the Half Street Central Farm Market near Nationals Stadium in Southeast. (Photo courtesy Central Farm Market.com)
food products from the regional farmers and producers, all the way from Pennsylvania to Southern Virginia,” Berliner said. “We are committed to helping our partners, farmers and makers to continue to grow, practice conscious farming techniques and sustain the health and wellbeing of the community.” Berliner realizes that most neighborhoods in Ward 8 are considered by District and federal officials to be food deserts – where a full-service grocery store doesn’t operate within a comfortable transit distance of residents. He said the Half Street market will give ward residents more grocery options. Berliner and Moser also remain aware that two full-service grocery stores are located close to their Half Street location. “We are providing people healthier
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food options than the grocery store,” Moser said. “A lot of food in the grocery store has chemicals that can be unhealthy for people. The fruits and vegetables at our market are grown on small farms and are grown naturally.” Moser said the market will participate in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and the
Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC). “We look forward to serving the people of the area, particularly those in Ward 8,” Berliner said. “In addition to offering food, we have programs we think will satisfy everyone.” WI @JamesWrightJr10
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of the cruelest pain has come to a group with the least capacity to understand and cope with it. More than 167,000 children – roughly one in 450 of all children in the U.S. – have lost at least one of their caretakers to COVID-19. Statistics show that non-White children had the highest rates of caregiver loss. Nationally, non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic children lost caregivers at more than twice the rate 2.4 and 2.5 times, respectively, of white children. American Indian or Alaska Native [AI/AN] children and Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander children had the highest rate of caregiver loss, at nearly four times the rate of white children. Researchers found that those differences are due to higher COVID-19 death rates and larger average household sizes with co-residing grandparents or others being more common among non-white populations. “These disparities are most concentrated in the youngest age cohort,” the authors wrote. Disparities also varied by state and territory. The District of Columbia had the highest rates of Black and Hispanic
parents at nearly 200,000. Generations United, a D.C.-based nonprofit whose goal is to improve the lives of children, youth and older adults, reported that before the pandemic, 2.6 million children already lived with their grandparents. The group said when a parent dies many grandparents provide childcare, transportation and financial help. “If something happens to us, what happens to the children?” wrote Cassandra Gentry, a grandmother raising two grandchildren. America’s COVID-19 crisis has not ended “but we have begun to count the staggering size of our loss,” researchers at Covid Collaborative revealed in a report called “Hidden Pain: Children Who Lost a Parent or Caregiver to Covid-19 and What the Nation Can Do for Them.” “An outbreak beyond precedent has led to deaths on the scale of a global war. Moreover, these tragedies were experienced in the isolation of pandemic precautions and hospital wards,” the researchers stated. The group said hundreds of thousands have died simultaneously but largely apart. Composed of a diverse and comprehensive team of leading experts in health, education and the economy, Covid Collaborative noted that some
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