Urban Growers Collective Grows Food and Opportunities for Chicago’s At-Risk Youth

The non-profit organization is helping feed communities while creating pathways for at-risk youth.

CHICAGO, ILL. (RFD News) — Across America, nearly 150,000 farms sell directly to consumers, and a growing number of those are located in urban areas. In Chicago, one organization is taking that a step further, using agriculture to help feed the community while creating opportunities for others.

Erika Allen, founder and CEO of Urban Growers Collective, says farming plays a bigger role than just producing food: “Agriculture to me defines our humanity in a lot of ways, and the arts. How we express ourselves, how we nurture each other. It’s how civilization was built. It’s also why empires fall.”

Allen says her goal has been to create pathways for at-risk youth, giving them access to therapy, job training, and hands-on experience in agriculture. She says the organization focuses on growing food while also providing workforce development and education in a safe, welcoming environment.

The group also operates a community garden where around 60 families grow their own produce, with the nonprofit supplying compost and plant starts.

Allen says even the artwork on-site reflects that mission, with murals on shipping containers telling the story of the community and its growth.

According to USDA data, roughly 148,000 direct-to-consumer farms generate about $14 billion in sales each year.

Related Stories
University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture students traveled to Italy to study Roman and medieval construction, gaining a unique global educational experience.
Funds will support student programs and leadership opportunities across the National FFA Organization. The next Give FFA Day is scheduled for February 25, 2027.
This third-generation seafood family transitioned from shrimping and now produces millions of oysters each season along Texas’ Gulf Coast.
Museum explores how early car makers played a part in advancing agriculture
During World War II, Augusta National Golf Club temporarily became a working farm, raising cattle and turkeys and harvesting pecans to support the war effort.
Moody Blooms grows more than 20 varieties of tulips and has opened its farm to the public as a spring agritourism destination in Texas.

Knoxville native Neal Burnette-Irwin is a graduate from MTSU where he majored in Journalism and Entertainment Studies. He works as a digital content producer with RFD News and is represented by multiple talent agencies in Nashville and Chicago.


LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Campustown Showdown Founder Christian Calliham shared a sneak peek, explaining how the upcoming Iowa stock show evolved from its sister event, the Aggieville Showdown in Kansas.
After a challenging year, Georgia pecan growers are looking ahead with cautious optimism as costs and global tensions weigh on the future of the crop.
Shells from restaurants are collected, cleaned, and returned to the water, where they can support new growth.
Louisiana State University Professor Shelly Pate Kerns says a late freeze forced widespread replanting of some crops across the state.
Mobile unit supports first responders with equipment and hands-on training
Event focuses on helping communities grow through local business
Rural Lifestyle & Entertainment Shows
“Positively Paula,” is a nationally-syndicated lifestyle/food show that invites viewers to share a moment with their friend: Paula Deen, who we know and love.
Strong rural traditions, religion, cowboy boots, and technology collide in “Cowboy Church” — and taking part is as easy as turning on the TV! Airing Sundays on RFD Network.
Richard “Red” Skelton, reigned as the virtual King of TV Variety Show Comedy throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Airing for a total of of 20 seasons, from 1951 through 1971, Red’s hilarious facial contortions and colorful cast of boneheaded personas – including indept Sheriff Deadeye, inebriated boxer Cauliflower McPugg, hillbilly Clem Kadiddlehopper, and hobo Freddie the Freeloader – kept a whole generation of Americans in stitches during the earliest decades of television. Memorable guest stars included John Wayne, Phyllis Diller, Mickey Rooney, Audrey Meadows, Michael Landon, and many more.
Hop in and travel with J.B. Sauceda on a road trip to discover ordinary people doing extraordinary things on the back roads of Texas. TCR’s longtime hosts Bob & Kelli Phillips have passed the keys to a new storyteller, who will continue the journey to uncover uplifting stories about oddball collectors, thought-provoking artists, and everyday heroes making the world a better place.
Follow Aumann Auctions coast to coast on a road trip adventure! Each episode of “Old Iron Adventures” highlights the challenges of hosting an auction. Plus, get behind-the-scenes looks, history lessons & meet a cast of very interesting characters along the way!