Co-op Market

Grocery & Deli

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Monday - Saturday: 8am - 8pm
Sunday: 10am - 6pm

526 Gaffney Road
Fairbanks, AK 99701
907.457.1023

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GM’s Response to Ms Magazine Debate

March 22, 2014 By mary.christensen 8 Comments

At the heart of every cooperative is the desire to build common ground for member-owners and customers regardless of their backgrounds and beliefs. Co-op Market Grocery and Deli is no different. We welcome everyone.

It is also important to understand that as operators of a successful business we work to choose natural and organic products we think our customers will want to buy. We welcome comments and suggestions. Anyone can fill out a comment card at the customer service counter and we will consider these suggestions in our decision making. At the end of the day our board of directors has delegated operation to a management team focused on making good buying decisions to serve the needs of our member-owners. Sometimes people ask us to stop carrying products that other people want to buy. This makes decision making a little harder.

When faced with such dilemmas I believe that it is important to consider what is most important to our co-op and why did we set out to open this store to begin with? Probably our most important goal throughout the development years was improving the local economy. Another goal is providing our member-owners with the healthiest and freshest food possible. We also want to be both economically and financially sustainable. Finally, we care about our community.

We are proud of the work we are doing to create local economy, especially in our meat department. This week we are increasing the amount of local beef we buy and we’ve added local pork. Reindeer, goat and buffalo are regular offerings. All of our fish and seafood is wild caught in Alaskan waters. Our chicken is from our neighbors in Washington (since there are no poultry processing facilities in Alaska). Soon we’ll see more and more local produce. Last year local produce accounted for 35% of produce sales. This year we hope to increase that to 51%. Local eggs have just hit the shelves and we hope to offer more. (Call our fresh foods buyer, Steven Vandermaas, at 457-1023 Ext 104 if you have local eggs to sell.). We offer coffee from two local vendors – Diving Duck of Fairbanks and Kaladi Brothers of Anchorage. You’ll also find local ice cream and milk and many other local products in our aisles.

Possibly our most delicious local food comes right out of our own kitchen! Our talented chefs create amazing soups, salads and sandwiches using local meats and seafood and fresh organic vegetables. Many vegetarian and vegan options are available as well. Currently we are looking for a double soup warmer so that meat eaters and vegetarians can both find the soups they crave.

Perhaps our most important goal is sustainability. How do we provide our community with a financially sustainable community grocery store that thrives for years to come? This was the question I was working on when the debate over Ms magazine came to my attention. We have recently joined National Cooperative Grocer’s Association and a Development Advisor spent a week here helping me to assess how we need to improve operations. We’re excited about the opportunity NCGA offers us. Coming in June you will see Co+op Deals throughout the store. You might even get a coupon book or sales flyer in the mail. NCGA also helps us to offer education, recipes and information about natural foods.

Concern for community is another goal near and dear to us. Last fall we started the popular Lend a Hand program that gives you the opportunity to round up at the register and help your favorite charity. Our member-owners and customers donated over $1500 to both Stone Soup Cafe (Breadline) and the Foodbank.

As cooperators we do not represent one political agenda. When we offer reading material that we think people will want to buy that does not mean that the opinions represented in the magazine are ours. We strive to offer a balance of reading material that interests our customers. You will find food, farming and exercise magazines, literary magazines, and both the New Republic and Ms. While we welcome suggestions, our professional staff makes the buying decisions for our store. We will not be voting on what magazines (or other products) to carry but ultimately, for member-owners, the best way to vote is by buying the products you like.

Again, what matters most at our co-op? Local economy, healthy food, sustainability and community.

Thanks,
Mary Christensen
General Manager

Filed Under: Issues Tagged With: education, news stories, politics, principles

Community sustainability forum

November 18, 2009 By coopmarket 1 Comment

Hans Geier, FCCM board member, attended a forum at Noel Wien Library Nov. 4 on community sustainability and food security. From the blog of the UAF School of Natural Resources & Agricultural Sciences:

Hans Geier spoke on the imminent establishment of the Fairbanks Community Cooperative Market. Geier, who is a board member of the FCCM, is also a Cooperative Extension Service agent, an instructor with SNRAS, and a farmer. The FCCM will concentrate on selling locally produced goods and food. He described one of the difficulties in getting Alaska-grown food into the hands of consumers, saying that most Alaska seafood in the state’s supermarkets has been first shipped to distributors in Seattle and then shipped back up to Alaska. The market will try to establish direct shipping from Alaska businesses, such as seafood cooperatives, farmers’ cooperatives, the two dairies (Matanuska Creamery and Northern Lights Dairy), Alaska-grown oyster producers, and so on.

Filed Under: Publicity Tagged With: community, local food production, news stories, sustainability

Essay on Sustainable Agriculture

October 30, 2009 By mary.christensen 3 Comments

for SARE New Voices Contest
December, 2007

I didn’t grow up on a farm.  When I was young, I never learned how to fix a screen door let alone a tractor.   I didn’t know which end of a seed to plant in the ground.  If you had told me twenty years ago that I would own the farthest north certified organic farm in the country, I would have told you that you must be crazy.

I come from a long line of Jewish tailors who never ventured too far from the city.  My connections with agriculture were like many kids growing up in suburban America – with the pictures of fields of grain on cereal boxes or occasional trips to the “country” to visit an apple orchard or to see goats and rabbits at a petting zoo.   But my parents always had a garden we always liked to eat and we liked to eat good fresh food.  This is how I came to agriculture – through gardening.  Through getting back to that connection with where your food comes from and acting on it.  I wanted that feeling of looking down a row of crops and feeling that connection with the plants and soil and the thousands of years of farmers and gardeners before me – food growers.

It took me a while to get into farming.  It didn’t come until my mid-thirties, when after many years of having a garden, I quit my day job and followed the dream of many back-to-the land folks before me. I had no idea of what I was doing, but I expanded the garden, bought a rototiller and Elliot Coleman’s “The New Organic Grower”, and started to make a go of it as a market farmer.  It certainly hasn’t been easy, especially since we live in interior Alaska square in the middle of agricultural zone 1.  There is very little historical farmland where we live.  Our farm was literally carved out of the Alaska wilderness with a chainsaw and bulldozer – hardly a soft footprint on the land.  But we justified the destruction of 10 acres of our forest with the belief that having a farm and feeding people was, in the end, a good thing for the community.  After all, wasn’t that what all farmers had originally done?  Also by farming organically, we hoped we were insuring a healthy environment for any wildlife that used the farm, for ourselves and our workers, and for those who ate our produce.  The demand for quality local produce is high, and despite our growing pains as a farm, we are still able to stay afloat with a lot of hard work, and all of our savings.  After 10 years, we have a healthy farm and an increasingly successful business.

Since I come from this new movement of market gardeners turned farmer, my models for success and role models to seek advice from have been organic farmers many with similar experience as I but with more years under their belt.  We have learned the appropriate models for ecologically sound agriculture and the goals for our farm are the same as the goals for many farms like ours across the country – to minimize off-farm inputs while maintaining high soil fertility, to produce high quality and healthy produce, and maintain a profitable business.

We think about sustainability a lot in Alaska, however most of the discussion focuses on natural fish and wildlife populations and their relation to subsistence versus commercial harvest.  There is little talk about sustainable agriculture, but there should be.  Although one’s vision of Alaska might be one of a hunter alone on the tundra, we get most of our food like the rest of America – from large supermarkets run by huge corporations.  If the average piece of food travels approximately 1500 miles from producer to consumer in the rest of the country, it travels much farther to us in Alaska.  For this reason, and many others, we should be concerned about sustainability on a local and community scale.

If our state seems extreme, it is but a microcosm of the country as a whole.  We need to look within our own communities for inputs to agriculture and other resources.  Our model for farming does follow a community approach.  Eating locally is not just a buzzword for marketing – although that is very effective – but it also should be the way we do business.  “Thinking globally and acting locally” is not only the right thing to do for the earth, it is the only economical thing to do.  With the cost of fuel rising ever higher coupled with high shipping costs, we have to think very carefully what it is we import.  Looking at ways to improve the soil, create energy, and market crops must be local in order for us to make a living and feel as though we’re living our lives for the betterment of our community.

Small-scale and locally marketed agriculture should not be just a fringe or niche economy. By showing that we can make a living while growing healthy crops by ecologically sound methods we will make ourselves assets in our local economies by encouraging both new farmers and intelligent agriculture.   It will continue to cost more for food, but we cannot keep going down the path of large scale commodity agriculture transported huge distances or we will be paying a higher and higher price for the wrong reasons.

I can now fix a screen door, sometimes fix my tractor and plant seeds right side up.  If the son of a long line of Jewish tailors can carve out a niche in small scale agriculture, then I’m optimistic that this growing movement of community-centered agriculture can keep gaining momentum.  We need to invest in community agriculture – it is at the core of sustainability.

Mike Emers
Rosie Creek Farm
Ester, Alaska

Filed Under: Issues, Member education Tagged With: community, education, local food production, news stories, sustainability

First of a Series – Organic Pancake Feed – Sunday, October 4, 2009

September 26, 2009 By mary.christensen Leave a Comment

Breakfast Series

Organic Pancake Feed featuring local berries

Ken Kunkel CommunityCenter – 2645 Goldstream Road
Sunday, October 4
11 am
$10 for adults and
$7 for children under 12
Free for children under 5

The purpose of this breakfast series is to exchange information and ideas, as well as raise funds.

View our powerpoint presentation and visit with the board members.

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: fundraisers, news stories

Articles on the Harvest Fair

September 2, 2009 By coopmarket Leave a Comment

Here’s an excerpt from the article in the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner on the Harvest Fair that appeared August 30, written by Rebecca George:

Despite humble beginnings, a locally owned and operated cooperative grocery is becoming a reality in Fairbanks.

More than 500 people attended the Pioneer Park Civic Center for the Harvest Fair on Saturday to check out what will soon be a Fairbanks Community Cooperative Market in downtown Fairbanks.…“Our community has wildly diverse interests in wildly diverse things — and that could very well define Fairbanks,” Rep. David Guttenberg said as he introduced the market and read a proclamation about the co-op’s visionary, Dave Lacey, who died this year.

This story was picked up by the Anchorage Daily News, too. There was also a story in the News-Miner the day before the event.

Filed Under: Events, Publicity Tagged With: news stories

Story on the FCCM and the Foodland building

July 21, 2009 By coopmarket Leave a Comment

This story on the FCCM was published recently in the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. “Fairbanks Community Cooperative Market looks to take over Foodland building,” by Rena Delbridge, was published Monday, July 13:

It’s dark and cool inside the old Foodland building at the end of Lacy Street.

And it’s a bit of a mess, scattered with the behind-the-scenes mechanisms that served grocery shoppers.

But on Sunday, organizers of a work day to bring a community market to life there saw potential.

“We need to think about how we’re going to reduce the whole transportation factor in food,” interim board chair Rob Leach said. “We need to be locally self-sufficient. If you’re going to wait for government to solve these problems, it’s going to be a long, long wait. We need to do it locally, and we need to do it for ourselves.”

By April, organizer Mary Christensen hopes for a bright, bustling business, with a stream of shoppers seeking locally produced meats and produce with a bend toward organics.

This article resulted in a huge increase in the number of visits to the website and the blog, as well as numerous comments and a letter to the editor which also garnered quite a few comments.

Filed Under: Publicity Tagged With: news stories, store design

Hear local music, promote local food at Co-op fundraiser

November 22, 2008 By coopmarket Leave a Comment

Latitude 65, Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
by Glenn Burnsilver
November 21, 2008

The fundraiser will feature performances from talented local musicians, and raise money for the local co-op to purchase and establish a natural foods grocery. Performing musicians include Robin Dale Ford, Pat Fitzgerald, Alex Clarke and Ron Veliz. Ford and Fitzgerald regularly perform together, as a duo, and with their band Dang! They also run 10th Planet Records. Their music ranges from folk and singer-songwriter to bluegrass and roots rock.

Read the full story here.

Filed Under: Events, Publicity Tagged With: fundraisers, music, news stories

News story on the co-op on KUAC

November 21, 2008 By coopmarket Leave a Comment

KUAC interviewed Dave Lacey about the co-op, and aired the story Thursday, Nov. 21. To listen to it, go to KUAC’s website. It’s about 1:07 in Dan Bross’s newscast.

Filed Under: Publicity Tagged With: news stories

Downtown Fairbanks co-op grocery store in the works

November 6, 2008 By coopmarket Leave a Comment

Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, September 28, 2008
by Rena Delbridge

As prices rise at the grocery store, stories spread about contaminated food and people grow increasingly concerned with carbon footprints, a Fairbanks man is pursuing a grocery alternative.

Dave Lacey wants to establish a cooperative grocery store with a full line of natural foods and green products. Think hormone-free buffalo meat raised in Delta, locally produced milk, green goods like light bulbs and natural sponges, even honey and syrup made in the Interior.

Read the full story here.

Filed Under: Publicity Tagged With: news stories

Group eyes local natural food co-op

November 6, 2008 By coopmarket Leave a Comment

Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, March 27, 2007
by Eric Lidji, staff writer

A local group is hoping to attract support for a natural food co-op in Fairbanks.

“We felt there was a need in the community for it,” said Dave Lacey, one of the leads on the project. “We can’t depend on corporate or government to take care of us. We’re at the end of the supply line up here.”

The core group of about one dozen people are in the process of incorporating with the state and raising money for a feasibility study to determine if Fairbanks has a viable market for local, natural foods.

See full story here (HTML) or here (PDF).

Filed Under: Publicity Tagged With: news stories

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