🌾 At The Farm Life, our mission is clear: cultivate sustainable farming, educate the community, and do it with Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at the root. Here’s how intentional DEI practices guide everything we do:
1. DEI at Our Core
We define:
- Diversity as the unique backgrounds—from race, ability, and income to culture, age, and identity—everyone brings.
- Equity as removing systemic barriers with accessible programs, materials, and pricing.
- Inclusion as creating spaces where everyone—regardless of who they are—feels they belong.
This aligns with sector leaders like Organic Farming Research Foundation and Agriculture Future of America, who integrate DEI to build equity from the ground up.
2. Programs Designed for Accessibility
- Sliding-Scale & Free Access: Low-income families, seniors, veterans, and youth can attend our events through affordability zones.
- Welcoming Diverse Traditions: We incorporate cultural crop practices and storytelling—like The Food Project and Shelburne Farms do—to amplify voices and experiences across our workshops.
3. Representation Across Leadership
- Board & Volunteer Inclusion: Our advisory board and volunteer crew reflect the community we serve—youth, farmers of color, people with disabilities, veterans, and individuals from different cultural backgrounds.
- Community Voices Elevated: We seek direct feedback through panels and surveys, ensuring programs meet real needs rather than making assumptions.
4. Staff Training & Equity Audits
- All staff complete DEI training covering bias, privilege, and inclusive engagement—per nonprofit sector best practices and sign a form understanding DEI at The Farm Life.
- We conduct annual equity audits to spot and address any gaps or barriers in our programming and policies.
5. Measuring Progress with Clarity
Our internal dashboard tracks:
- Participant demographics
- Outreach methods to underserved groups
- DEI training and equity audit findings
- Accessibility improvements
We transparently share results in annual reports and grant applications.
6. Celebrations & Cultural Spotlights
We host events like:
- Indigenous Plant Day honoring seed practices
- Women in Agriculture Week featuring local female farmers
- Accessible Garden Open House for people with disabilities
These events spotlight culture, equity, and ways farming enriches every community.
7. Accountability through Policy
- We maintain a Non‑Discrimination Policy for staff, volunteers, and visitors covering race, gender, ability, age, income, and more.
- DEI commitments are embedded into our Volunteer Handbook, Board Charter, and grant proposals, making diversity and equity core responsibilities.
Looking Ahead
The Farm Life embraces DEI as continuous work, not a checkbox. We are committed to:
- Deepening partnerships with BIPOC, veteran, and disability-focused organizations
- Expanding equity in land access and training
- Seeking additional community feedback, especially from historically underserved groups
🌱 Why This Matters
- Enriches perspectives and meaningful engagement within our community
- Increases program access, participation, and capacity-building
- Makes us stronger candidates for funding and local support
Let’s Grow Together
By embedding DEI into every aspect of our work—from soil health to social equity—The Farm Life ensures that farming is a space belonging to everyone.
“Diversity is a fact, inclusion is a practice, equity is a goal.” —A guiding philosophy that grounds our farm in belonging for all.

Founder/CEO –At Harvesting Change & The Farm Life, our mission is to sow real seeds of change by nurturing a hands-on, inclusive learning environment rooted in sustainable farming, community connection, and traditional wisdom rooted in equity, sustainability, and social justice. We cultivate more than just gardens—we grow knowledge, resilience, and relationships that nourish people of all races, genders, and ages and the land alike.