Dear cooperators,

Food Co-op Initiatve proudly presented two awards to *THREE* outstanding food co-ops at CCMA last month. The Bill Gessner Startup Food Co-op Award is awarded to a late stage organizing startup that has demonstrated:

  • an effective use of the most up-to-date best practices throughout their organizing
  • strong community support
  • realistic prospects of post-open sustainability

This award was created in honor of Bill Gessner, by his friends and colleagues, in the food co-op movement.

Congratulations to our 2026 Bill Gessner Award winner, Charles River Food Co-op in Waltham, MA! charles river food co op wins 2026 bill gessner award

Since they began organizing in 2021, Charles River Food Co-op invested their energy into understanding startup best practices and became robust participants in peer learning. After completing their Stage 2 feasibility study work, they are launching work to identify the right site for their future 6k – 10k sq ft store!

The FCI Startup of the Year Award honors a startup that displays notable excellence in one or more of four areas:

  • community organizing
  • strong & viable business planning
  • bold & effective innovation in co-op development
  • implementing new approaches to meet the needs of communities under-served by food co-ops

The “third wave” of startup food organizing, which emerged from the mid-aughts with the goal of replicating the natural food store model and success of “second wave” food co-ops, has crested and is being joined by a surging “fourth wave” of food cooperation that is focused on serving both remote rural and historically redlined communities that are organizing their own solutions to systemic loss of grocery access. To acknowledge this historic moment, FCI awarded one “third wave” Startup of the Year, and one “fourth wave” Startup of the Year for 2026.

Congratulations to SunCoast Market Co-op in Imperial Beach, CA and South Philly Food Co-op in Philadelphia, PA for winning Startup of the Year!

cropped SunCoast Market Co-op with JQ and Chris wins Startup of the Year 2026

South Philly Food Co-op wins Startup of the Year 2026 at CCMA

With limited access to public transportation, 73% of the residents of Imperial Beach, CA have to shop outside of their community to meet their basic grocery needs. This majority-Latine community organized to build their own food access solution, and SunCoast Market Co-op won many grants and awards along the way for their powerful community organizing work. 

South Philly Food Co-op (SPFC) opened in 2020 in a site that the experts feared would not work, but through research on co-ops in similarly dense, urban communities, SPFC’s leadership decided their co-op could thrive there. The results speak for themselves – by the end of their fifth year of operations, they were achieving their market study’s year 10 sales projections!

2026 CCMA recap

For the second year in a row, the entire Food Co-op Initiative team attended the annual CCMA Conference for cooperative leaders and staff from established co-ops in Tacoma, WA. The conference is organized by the University of Wisconsin Center for Cooperatives, and had nine host co-ops.

Food Co op Initiative team Chris Mercedes JQ at CCMA 2026

The FCI team at this year’s CCMA. Pictured from left: Chris Dilley, Mercedes Gosby and JQ Hannah. Photo by Bonnie Hudspeth

CCMA is a key opportunity for FCI to magnify the role of startups in the food co-op movement and to celebrate their achievements from a national stage. We did this by presenting two awards to three startup food co-ops during the awards luncheon.

Chris Dilley, Director of Startup Support, with Heather Lazickas of seven roots and John Tashiro of City Market Co-op shared their experiences creating, converting, and managing hybrid stores in one of the breakout sessions offered during the two-day conference.

“This topic is an important part of the larger conversation about co-ops meeting community needs especially in the face of the continual concentration of supply and chain grocery and costs of food,” says Chris Dilley. “Shoppers are trading down on products, and on stores, and co-ops are exploring this as a way to stay relevant. Startups are leading the way here as the 4th Wave looks to solve for a broader community need than just local and organic.”

STARTUP ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Stage 1: Cultural Harvest Collective, a BIPOC-led community group working in partnership with the City of Monmouth, OR, completed a seven-week community feasibility series at their farmer’s market, combining education about food co-ops and a community survey. The result: a community that is more aligned around having a co-op, as well as a new name! Congratulations, Unity Market Co-op!

Stage 3Central Brooklyn Food Co-op (NY) recently hired a project manager! The co-op has an established relationship with a developer that will start next year to build their store as part of a larger project, with a plan to open in 2028. This Black-led food co-op is planning to run on member labor.

Stage 4West Chester Cooperative (PA) hired a General Manager! Issa Ostrander joined the co-op, first as member #720, and then more recently joined the team as their General Manager. Construction is under way, and the co-op hopes to open later this summer. Stay tuned!

Stage 5: Detroit People’s Food Co-op (MI) recently underwent a change in leadership. Welcome to Aaron Orr, the new General Manager, and huge FCI love and kudos to Lanay Gilbert-Williams, the board chair, who stepped down from that role for about 6 months to provide stabilizing leadership in the store as the Interim General Manager.

Conversions: Independent, downtown grocery store, Tom’s Market, has been a crucial community hub for 55 years in Yellow Springs, OH. Facing the all-too-common possibility of losing it after the owner recently announced it was time to sell the business and retire, the Yellow Springs Community Foundation jumped into action. Working with their neighbors at Co-op Dayton, they are mapping a path for the Foundation to purchase the business and convert it to cooperative community ownership! If your community is in a similar situation, check out our free Co-op Conversion Action Guide.

Store Openings!

Congratulations to the communities that have worked so hard to bring their community-owned store to life:

Coopiversaries

These co-ops are celebrating 1 or more years of being open this month:

Is your food co-op a “3rd wave” food co-op that opened between 1998 and 2024? Did we forget to mention its Coopiversary? Email us at info@fci.coop so we can add your co-op to our Coopiversary calendar!

FCI EVENTS & WORKSHOPS

Future-Ready Co-ops – A Summer Tech Series: Starting Wednesday, June 24 

A continuation of the powerful conversations sparked by the tech-focused FCI Live sessions, this FREE three-part summer series brings co-op leaders, technologists and practitioners together to explore how co-ops can navigate the rapid tech change while staying grounded in cooperative identity, democratic values and community impact.

Register for free today:


Black Led Day 2026 in Detroit, MI: Save the date!

The 6th Annual Black Led Day. Mark Your Calendars for Black Led Day 202 at the Detroit Food Commons & Detroit People's Food Co-op. September 17, 2026. Registration details coming soon.

On Thursday, September 17, National Black Food and Justice Alliance (NBFJA) and Black food cooperators from across the U.S. will gather at the Detroit Food Commons and Detroit People’s Food Co-op for a day rooted in connection, shared vision, and collective momentum.

From NBFJA: “Even as the Up & Coming Food Co-op Conference restructures this year, Black-Led Day ain’t going nowhere! This gathering continues, and we cannot wait to be together again. Go ahead and mark your calendar, and keep an eye out for registration details coming soon.”

We’ll share updates from NBFJA as they are available. In the meantime, join their email list to get updates directly from NBFJA!

WELCOMING NEW BOARD MEMBERS

For the first time in its history, FCI ran an open application process for three open seats on our Board of Directors. In the second year of living into our new strategic plan, our Board’s goal was to add nefood co op initiative new board members june 2026w members with the experience, vision, and expertise to elevate their work and to lead the plan’s implementation. We are proud to welcome four new cooperative leaders to the Food Co-op Initiative Board of Directors as of June 2026 for three year terms:

  • Tamah Yisrael – Cooperative Governance & Financial Systems Strategist, TMH Solutions Hub & Cooperation New Orleans
  • Gabrielle ‘Gabby’ Davis – Owner/Principal Consultant, Equitable Consultants
  • G. Cousins – Project Director, West Boulevard Neighborhood Coalition – Three Sisters Market
  • Benjamin Bartley – Director of Responsible Procurement, UNFI

ESTABLISHED FOOD CO-OPS, YOU MAKE US POSSIBLE

In 2025, a record-breaking 60 established food co-ops became FCI Full Circle co-ops by donating to our work, raising a total of $93,000!

17.3% of FCI’s work was funded by donations directly from food co-ops in 2025.

With our federal cooperative development funding under even more threat in 2026 and nonprofit funding shrinking everywhere – we are asking established food co-ops to help us break this record again.

Our 2026 goals: 75 Full Circle donor co-ops donating a total of $110,000.

There are four easy ways for your food co-op to donate and “get on the map” for FCI.

Let’s keep building our food co-op movement’s future!

fci full circle 2026 goal

UP & COMING CONFERENCE REVISIONING PROCESS: WHAT’S NEXT?

The national gathering of the startup food co-op movement will return in 2027 in Detroit, MI!

With big changes on the horizon for Up & Coming before it returns next year, hearing directly from the food co-op organizers that made it what it has become is our top goal as we reimagine its future.

Enter our incredible ReVis Team made up of six cooperative and food justice leaders of diverse experience and expertise!

Up & Coming Food Co-op Conference ReVisioning Team. Juliette Banerjee, Dr. Jasmine Jackson, Allanah Hines, Nicole Klimek, Gabrielle Davis and Tamah Yisrael

Learn more about the ReVisioning Team

This team has been meeting intensively in May and June to design an input process that is accessible and centers the voices of startup food co-ops.

What’s next in the revisioning process:

JULY – public launch of the first round of the Up & Coming revisioning input process

This round will seek to find out what is most valuable about the national gathering for startups, what barriers exist to them attending, and their hopes for how it might change going forward.

The input process will be virtual so all may access it, and will run from July to September 2026.

Watch your inboxes for a special email when the input process launches in late July!