Feel-Good Friday: An Entrepreneur Creates a Grocery Where His Detroit Neighbors Can Invest in Themselves

Date:

Share post:



691842e3 c629 44cf a158 26ae83176fa9

With all this talk from Kamala Harris about an opportunity agenda and her claims that Black entrepreneurs need a certain amount of startup capital that only the government can provide, this week’s Feel-Good Friday is about a Black entrepreneur who bootstrapped his own vision and invited the community to join him in that vision. The result: A successful grocery store in what is considered a food desert, that is also a community investment.

Last year grocer, gardener, and entrepreneur Raphael Wright opened Neighborhood Grocery, a small-scale market with a hyper-local focus, on Detroit’s East Side. It’s been nearly ten years since the city, with a 78 percent Black population, had a Black-owned grocery store. Wright, a Detroit native who grew up near the new market in Jefferson Chalmers, says he’s been listening to what his community has been asking for regarding healthy, local food. He’s working to provide fresh options and local products that haven’t been close or convenient for too long. 

Wright, a local entrepreneur, planned for the cooperative business model, mounting a GoFundMe to raise money toward the startup costs. Wright got the balance of the $85,000 in funds from a Motor City Match grant and this helped to finalize his plans. Wright opened the doors of Neighborhood Grocery in the summer of 2023, as a membership co-op where anyone over 18 can become an investor. Once the store breaks even, investors will receive a portion of the grocery store’s profits, which means the community is invested in the store’s thriving. 

“With business, there’s not going to be a lot of funding coming in unless it’s proven that it could work,” Wright says. “But the crowdfunding element proved to me that people believed in the dream. I’m very appreciative of all the support I have gotten, and I’m really focused on that.”

In 2020, Wright bought half an acre of vacant land to start a market garden to self-distribute produce to customers and grow produce to sell in the store. He’s harvested a variety of summer crops such as tomatoes, squash, salad greens, and turnips.   

“I was exposed to gardening, but I didn’t do it seriously until the pandemic,” he says. “Once the pandemic hit, it became a necessity and another opportunity to serve the neighborhood.”

And it does. the store stocks fruit and vegetables from four Black-owned farms, and features products that are made in Michigan, as well as national, brand name products. The look and feel of the place is no different from a Kroger or a Meijer, but its goods are sourced from the surrounding community. 

Because of this service to the community, in March, Wright was the recipient of a Presidential Lifetime Achievement Award. Wright also wants to extend the investment to youth, and offer business and financial literary opportunities for the community. He said:

This is something we give back in exchange for the investment in our store.Yes,  a way to finance, but this is how you change the neighborhood. You can’t keep asking for help outside. If we live in this city and want to change it, we have to do it ourselves.

Wright is creating his own opportunity agenda and teaching others how to do the same. When the power of entrepreneurship and ingenuity is unleashed, and government gets out of the way, there is nothing that cannot be achieved.





Source link

Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes health, sport, tech, and more. Some of her favorite topics include the latest trends in fitness and wellness, the best ways to use technology to improve your life, and the latest developments in medical research.

Recent posts

Related articles

WATCH: Trump-Endorsed Brown Scores Knock-Out Punch in NV Senate Debate on Dem's Sketchy Stock-Trading

One of the heavyweight bouts in the upcoming election is the U.S. Senate race in Nevada, between...

A Staggering 52% Say They're Worse Off Than They Were Four Years Ago—So Why Is This Election So Close?

It’s a question asked by then-GOP candidate Ronald Reagan in 1980 as he smoked Jimmy Carter with...

Video of 14 CBP Agents Moving a Log 15 Feet Is Exactly Why We Need Trump's Gov’t Efficiency Commission

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) posted a video to X on Thursday promoting efforts, alongside their...

Youngkin Calls DOJ's Lawsuits vs. States Clearing Non-Citizens' Names From Voter Rolls 'Unprecedented'

During this election cycle, we've written about the Biden-Harris Justice Department's heavy-handed moves against states trying to...

Authorities Can't Identify Mysterious White Blobs Found on Newfoundland Beaches, Unlike Biden in Rehoboth

It's not often you see the terms "Biden" and "mysterious white blob" in the same sentence, but...

OPINION: The Death Penalty Needs to Die

There have been several high-profile death penalty cases over recent years that have prompted discussion about the...

More Dem Candidates' Ads Blow Up That Narrative Against Trump, Show Just How Badly Harris Is Doing

How do you know Kamala Harris is in trouble, and that the momentum is with former President...

Friday Fun: What Are Your Favorite Things About Social Media?

Like everything else, the advent of social media has pros and cons. We complain about the bad...