The Craig Faille Show Noam Kimelman, left, a DYFB program director, poses at the Eastern Market in Detroit with students and colleagues. Detroit Youth Food Brigade Teens seek to provide "food justice." Shelli Liebman Dorfman Contributing Writer A group of Detroit high school students are revving up for an innovative summer learning and employment experience, but are in need of some financial support from the community. Twenty teens will team up with 10 Detroit food-based businesses for an entrepreneurial education with a focus on selling products to 10 neighborhood markets through the Detroit Youth Food Brigade (DYFB). In a quadruple-win initiative, the students will gain hands-on skills and expertise in business management, marketing and sales, cooking and nutri- tion, sourcing and logistics; businesses will receive additional product outlets, a brand boost and valuable staff sup- port; neighborhood markets will gain increased support and product diversity, greater economic impact and improved food security in their surrounding areas; and each student will receive a $580 stipend in addition to tips received at markets. The project was created to pro- mote food justice and build the local food economy in Detroit by Noam Kimelman, under the guidance of Dan Carmody at Eastern Market and with the help of Amy Berkhoudt, a high school English teacher at Cesar Chavez Academy in Southwest Detroit. "Each of the businesses we work with produces high-quality food; most of them provide healthy food," Kimelman said. "But food justice is more than just access to healthy food. It's about access to the same quality and freshness that we have come to expect in the suburbs. That's why it's called justice. It's about equality. We believe that everyone, no matter their socioeconomic status or place of residency, should have equal access to high-quality and healthy food." DYFB was started with a $30,000 grant through Eastern Market, from W.K. Kellogg Foundation and Project for Public Spaces. But now they are in need of another $12,000 to purchase a truck, along with the necessary equip- ment and supplies, including tables, chairs, tents, coolers and displays. They have applied for a Kickstarter grant, but the project will only be fund- ed if $12,000 is pledged by Monday, July 2, at 11:59 p.m. "The more money we raise through Kickstarter, the more students we can hire, the more interactive training we can offer, the more food-based busi- nesses we can include in the program, the more neighborhood markets we can support and the longer we can extend the program," Kimelman said." We ulti- mately hope to extend it into the school year and provide Detroit high school students with year-round employment." Kimelman said DYFB is financially sustainable once it gets started. "We need funding to get off the ground, but each market stand will generate income for the program, so that we can con- tinue expanding to more students, more businesses and more markets. "This is just the beginning of a youth-led campaign for citywide food security and a flourishing local food economy in Detroit," he said, adding that the involved students gain valuable skills. "We're hoping our future leaders will take initiative and solve the problems of their own communities," Kimelman said. "But first they need the tools and the experience E BEST OF HOUR DETROIT Reader's Choice Best Local Talk Radio Host W ee dais a, a m. 7 p.m. For more about the Detroit Youth Food Brigade and view a video by Ben Friedman of Detroit, visit www.detroityouthfoodbrigade. com . To pledge a donation, go to http://kck.st/Lkidl E. June 23 20L 11