Neighborhoods


Strategic Neighborhood Transformation

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The Idora Neighborhood Farmers’ Market will open Tuesday at 2600 Glenwood Ave., on the corner of Sherwood Avenue.

The market will be at that location every Tuesday from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m., ending Sept. 29.

The market offers farm-fresh products and is hosted by the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp.

The market accepts Ohio Electronic Benefit Transfer food assistance cards; Women, Infants and Children cards; and Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program coupons. The market can double purchases for those using food stamp cards up to $20 per visit.

To read the full story at Vindy.com, click here.

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If you're looking for fresh dinner ideas this summer, why not stop by a farmers market?

Urban farms have been popping up all around Youngstown and now that summer is here, all the fresh flavors are available at one stop.

Youngstown's Idora Neighborhood Farmers Market is open every Tuesday from 4:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., through September.

"I love to sell fresh food to people who look like me and people who live in my neighborhood, and I live in this neighborhood so I made sure this was the very first market I sold at," said Sophia Buggs of Lady Buggs Farm.

Buggs knows healthy, fresh food isn't always easy to come by, that's why she started tending her own garden and is teaching others how they can eat healthy too.

Another benefit to buying local are the simple ingredients that you know and can pronounce. Like, those found in Marcie's Jams and More.

"My rhubarb ginger (jam) has just rhubarb, fresh ginger, some sugar and some pectin," described Marcie Applegate.

Eating fresh can be more expensive. But, urban farms are all about making the produce available.

"If you come to the market and you use your food stamp card, if you swipe it for $10, you can get $20. If you swipe for $20 you get $40 to spend at the vendors. We love that because it makes food more affordable for people who need it," said Liberty Merrill with the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation.

Idora Neighborhood Farmers Market

2600 Glenwood Avenue

Every Tuesday from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

June 9, 2015 to September 29, 2015.

To see the full story from WKBN, click here.

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Wednesday, June 10, 2015

The Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation has been selected by Greater Ohio as a finalist for the Sustainable Development Nonprofit of the Year Award along with Downtown Dayton Partnership and University Circle Incoporated.

This Award recognizes a nonprofit individual or entity in Ohio that works with communities to identify local needs and addresses them with efficiency and effectiveness. Open to 501c3 designated non-profits and philanthropic institutions, this Award honors those organizations that are innovating community solutions and meeting local needs and opportunities with distinction. Congratulations to University Circle Inc who was selected as the winner of the statewide award!

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People living in Youngstown’s inner city now have a place to get fresh farm produce on a weekly basis this summer.

The Idora Neighborhood Farmers Market opened for businesss Tuesday afternoon. It is located at the corner of Glenwood Avenue and Sherwood Avenue.

Eight vendors were set up Tuesday, offering fresh farm produce, baked goods and even plants for residents to grow on their own. This year, the vendors are taking food stamps and WIC coupons for purchases.

“The awesome thing about that is that we are able to a double up program with the card that is funded by Mercy Health. So we are actually able to double the purchases of those using food stamps. So if you swipe your card for $10, you will be able to get $20 to spend at the vendors for eligible food,” Liberty Merrill of the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp. said.

The Idora Neighborhood Farmers Market is every Tuesday from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. through the end of September.

To see the full story from WKBN, click here.

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A city councilwoman is complaining that the city administration’s grass-cutting program is failing, but those in charge of it point to statistics that show it’s succeeding.

Councilwoman Janet Tarpley, D-6th, stood Thursday on Florida Avenue, just off Market Street on the South Side, in front of high grass, and pointed to other lots with uncut grass about 4- to 6-feet tall.

“It’s a problem throughout the city,” she said. “We’ve had problems for the last 10 years. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to cut grass, so why is it not being done?”

Sean McKinney, the city’s buildings and grounds commissioner, said between May 8 and Wednesday, the street department has cut grass at 3,343 vacant lots. The department will cut about 14,000 lots this year, he said. It cut about 12,000 last year.

Also, the city signed a $102,168 contract in March with the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp. to supervise and manage grass cutting at vacant houses, and spent $86,989 on equipment, including industrial lawn mowers as well as trimmers, chain saws, blowers and a wood chipper. The city is retaining ownership of the equipment.

Between April 15 and Tuesday, YNDC has cut lawns at 2,325 vacant houses, said Ian Beniston, its executive director. About 2,900 lawns at vacant houses were cut last year, McKinney said.

YNDC is on pace to make 10,000 cuts this year, Beniston said.

The city paid $35-a-lawn cut to private contractors last year. That cost is just about what the city is paying YNDC this year, and Beniston said the agency will more than triple the number of cuts done last year.

“It’s better managed than it’s ever been,” Beniston said.

Tarpley, who initially objected to the YNDC contract, said she hasn’t seen good results with the street department and YNDC cutting grass.

“They’re cutting some stuff, but not enough,” Tarpley said. “It’s ridiculous. It’s a poorly managed department. We should be tired of it.”

Mayor John A. McNally said, “This is a tough time of the year because the grass is growing, but the numbers show we’re going to cut more lawns this way than hiring private contractors and at less cost.”

The mayor also said the process this year is “more organized and structured using mapping to attack sections of the city all at once rather than helter-skelter.”

There are city areas with high grass, he said, but that “will be taken care of shortly. In a city our size, it takes time. However, I’m seeing more grass cut.”

To read the full story at Vindy.com, click here.

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Friday, June 12, 2015

On Tuesday, June 9th, Western Reserve Health Foundation awarded YNDC a grant of nearly $23,000 to expand Double-Up programming and promote local food in Youngstown.

The program will begin in the fall of 2015 and will hire community cooks to provide cooking instruction at sites around the city, including information about how to cook affordable meals and where to buy local produce. It will also provide incentive coupons for individuals to spend at farmers' markets. The program is meant to strengthen the local food system by increasing knowledge about healthy cooking techniques and inviting individuals across the city to improve their health by consuming fresh vegetables and fruits in season. The program also supports new and existing farmers by bringing new customers to farmers' markets and local food purchasing systems that exist in the area.

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Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Iron Roots has a new schedule of farming and cooking classes for the fall available!

Please see the flyers below. Cooking class topics include romantic dinners, cooking greens, and preserving harvests. Farming class topics include marketing your operation, composting, herb gardening, and other exciting classes. Classes are a great time to network with other cooks and gardeners and ask questions of farm staff. Please call YNDC at 330.480.0423 to RSVP. We hope to see you there!

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Wednesday, June 17, 2015

The PNC Foundation has approved a $9,000 grant to support YNDC's Financial Literacy programming.

The funds will support YNDC's comprehesive homeownership development services, including HUD-Certified Housing Counseling and Education, as well as the organization's small business development programming.

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Wednesday was the last regularly scheduled meeting for Youngstown City Council for the summer and many decisions were made, including a new partnership between the city and the Youngstown Air Reserve Station.

Within the next month, reservists from the 910th Airlift Wing in Vienna will help the city knock down vacant houses under the city’s demolition program.

“The sky is the limit, really. Working with the city and what they can allow and provide training for our airmen,” said 910th Airlift Wing Commander Col. James Dignan.

Youngstown Mayor John McNally said the idea came up after the city applied for a grant through the Department of Defense last year. That grant would help demolish a lot of vacant houses on the city’s south side and lower north side.

However, the agreement with the Air Reserve Station is a way the city can show the Department of Defense how a grant could benefit the city.

“This is pretty nice. We think it is a unique partnership. We think it will be something we can show to the Department of Defense as further reason why we should be granted the Innovative Readiness Training Program in the city of Youngstown,” McNally said.

The partnership with the Air Reserve will focus on a small number of demolitionss near Taft Elementary School on Avondale Avenue on the south side.

“We have 10 to 12 homes we want demolished this summer,” McNally said.

The partnership will cost the city between $20,000 and $25,000. And what happens next depends on what happens after this first mission.

“We are going to start with one building at a time and we will go from there, depending on what is available,” Col. Dignan said.

The demolitions are expected to start within the next month. Even though demolitions will be the air reservists’ biggest project, they also will help replace missing road signs across parts of the city.

To see the full story from WKBN, click here.

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The city is finalizing an agreement to have Youngs-town Air Reserve Station reservists handle neighborhood improvement projects starting with the demolition of 11 vacant structures around Taft Elementary School.

City council voted Wednesday to authorize the board of control sign an agreement with the Vienna-based station.

The demolition work will start next month, said Col. James D. Dignan, commander of the 910th Airlift Wing at the reserve station.

“I have journeymen and apprentices who need training on the heavy equipment” used for demolition work, he said. “It will get them training and certification in fields. It’s an opportunity for them to get hands-on experience while serving the city.”

To start, six to 10 reservists will do the demolition work around Taft, Dignan said.

He said he wants other work including electrical and wastewater to be implemented over time.

“It’s a good way to start,” Dignan said. “We’ll start small and look to expand it.”

The contract would expire June 30, 2016, pending board of control approval.

The work to be done around Taft is on Boston and Avondale avenues on the city’s South Side, said Abigail Beniston, the city’s code enforcement and blight remediation superintendent.

The city will provide the materials, tools and equipment for the reservists.

To read the full story at Vindy.com, click here.