Farmer News
Dallas dispenses $100K in grants to groups promoting urban agriculture

Oak Cliff Veggie Project
The city of Dallas is dispensing $100,000 to more than a dozen urban growers and vendors in support of their agricultural efforts.
According to a release, the city is partnered with Dallas County Health and Human Services in the Urban Agriculture Infrastructure Support Program, with awards to 14 agriculture entities, funding a total of 22 project sites in Dallas.
The 14 awardees include community farms/gardens, multi-family low-income housing, for-profit CSA’s, houses of worship, school growing sites, and secondary education.
Recipients include:
- Feed the Streetz Outreach
- Oak Cliff Veggie Project
- Dallas Half Acre Farm
- Elmwood Farm
- Paul Quinn College
- Oak Cliff Coffee Roasters
- Reshell Friels Farm
- Joppy Momma’s Farm
- Temple Emanu-El
To be eligible for funding, entities must engage in edible farming, contribute to the local food system by producing food or facilitating access to healthy food, and demonstrate a need to improve their infrastructure.
Funding comes from the City of Dallas Office of Environmental Quality and Sustainability (OEQS), in alignment with the city’s Comprehensive Environmental and Climate Action Plan, Goal 7 of which states that "All Dallas Communities Have Access to Healthy Local Food."
The pilot program was initiated in 2024.
The projects will use enhanced infrastructure to focus on expanding productive acreage, sustainable land stewardship practices, water conservation, and utilizing solar to power onsite cold storage, pumps, and lights where needed.
Projects at large are in areas facing challenges around nutrition and diet-related health disparities.
“Expanded access to healthy, locally grown foods that promote health and well-being have been shown to reduce diet-related disease, increase community resiliency, have a direct impact on farmer livelihoods and local economies where the dollar can circulate longer before leaving the Dallas community economy,” says Comprehensive Urban Agriculture Plan manager Rabekha Siebert in a statement. “When we invest in our local agriculture infrastructure, we are strengthening the network to reach more residents, so that ‘All Dallas Residents Have Access to Healthy Local Food".
A second round of funding of the Urban Agriculture Infrastructure Grant will be released summer 2025.