Author: Gregory Comer
Planning Unit: Ohio County CES
Major Program: Nutrition and Food Systems General
Plan of Work: Healthy & Safe Food Prep Methods; Farm-to-table; Farmer's Market; SNAP; Gardening; Food Dollars
Outcome: Intermediate Outcome
The problem
Since the onset of COVID-19, increased cost of food and access to a consistent supply of nutritious foods has become a challenge across the U.S and Kentucky.
The educational program response
The garden kits contained enough seed for a family of four, to grow green beans, zucchini squash, summer squash, cucumbers, beets, and herbs. The kits also contained general gardening publications from U.K. & KSU, publications specific for the vegetables & herbs seeds provided, SNAP publications, Chop Chop magazines for families with children, “Healthy at Home” newsletters, nutrition articles, recipes, and gardening calendars. The kits were distributed to:
The participants/target audience
To support Ohio County’s limited resource citizens in attaining nutritious vegetables, the ANR agent and FCS program Assistant expanded the garden kit program, by providing programming & kits to not only the Hartford & Fordsville Food Banks, but added the Senior Citizens Program, Ohio Co. Headstart, and the Ohio Co. Library Learning Program.
Other partners (if applicable)
Senior Citizens Center, Hartford Food Bank, Fordville Food Bank, Holy Redeemer Catholic Church, & 2-Hispanic groceries
Program impact or participant response.
Impacts seen include:
Testimonials from participating families:
The “2016 – Kids Count” ranks Ohio County 91st in child well-being. Similarly, the CDCs 2015 “You... Read More
The 2016 National Beef Quality Assurance Audit, showed that food safety and how/where cattle are r... Read More
The “2016 – Kids Count” ranks Ohio County 91st in child well-being. Similarly, the CDCs 2015 “You... Read More
The 2016 National Beef Quality Assurance Audit, showed that food safety and how/where cattle are r... Read More