Pueblo medical imaging
Noah Fish / Agweek "Kim, I call him the rock star, and I'm kind of the band manager, because he's always connecting with people and coming up with ideas," said Nigon-Crowley, executive director and garden manager of Village Agricultural Cooperative. Sin is the founder and president of the nonprofit organization and Nigon-Crowley is the executive director. 19, 2021, at one of the six growing sites of the Village Agricultural Cooperative and Learning Community.
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The reality of this seemed attainable to Sin, he said, after taking a car ride one day passed the Hmong American Farmers Association Farm on Highway 52, with Dee Sabol of the Rochester Diversity Council. "And so I asked them, what if there was land access for them to grow and feed themselves during the summer, and save that money during the winter to continue eating healthy." "The cost of food for them during the winter, to eat their culture's food, goes for double or triple," said Sin. The produce they were accustomed to in Cambodia was too expensive to buy in Minnesota, said Sin, especially in the winter. Kim Sin, founder and president of the Village Agricultural Cooperative, realized around 2018 while working with elderly members of the Cambodian community in Rochester, that many of them weren't eating healthy.
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Most of the growers for the Village Cooperative live in housing where they cannot grow food, or they wish to grow food to sell in local markets but can't find farmland access. But in Rochester there's the Village Agricultural Cooperative, which creates opportunities for area communities to grow culturally relevant foods.