Join hundreds of families transforming unused lawns into productive food gardens with professional guidance and ongoing support.
Establishing Core Infrastructure and Programs
• Tye's House 501(c)3 established as foundational non-profit
• Local Food Heroes Program launched at primary training location
• $250,000 USDA Northeast SARE Grant secured for program validation and funding
• FinStead Consulting operational for business development support
• Garden Education Center established at primary site
• Sweet Bulb initial product launch (September 2025) for fundraising
• The Slossberg Squeezery children's business model in development (Winter 2025)
• Strategic partnerships formed with veteran organizations, agricultural experts, and community groups
Building Market Farm and Mobile Service Infrastructure
Creating Stable Foundations for Program Participants
• Identify initial property partnerships
• Develop structured community living model
• Create resident selection criteria
• Design agricultural therapy integration with
Garden Education Center
• Launch first transitional housing location
• Integrate housing residents with agricultural training
• Establish mentorship and support systems
• Create pathways from housing to employment
• Connect residents with hands-on learning opportunities
Expanding Access and Creating Economic Opportunities
• Open Little Mini Market as community retail operation
• Formally launch The Farm at Leslie Court as Garden Education Center
• Feature products from Local Food Heroes graduates
• Create family STEAM agriculture program
• Establish community gathering spaces at both locations
• Launch youth entrepreneurship programs based on Squeezery model
Connect all ecosystem components:
• Veterans completing training → Operating mobile services
• Housing residents → Agricultural employment
• Market farm production → Little Mini Market sales
• Community members → Educational programs at both Garden Education Centers
• Local families → Apprenticeship opportunities at The Farm
• Youth → Business development through proven models

Continuous Services:
• Marketing support for all initiatives
• Business planning for graduate enterprises
• Grant writing and funding development
(USDA Northeast SARE grant management)
• Digital infrastructure management

Local Food Heroes Training:
• Regenerative agriculture techniques
• Business development skills
• Mobile service operations
• Market garden management for personal food production

The Slossberg Squeezery
Winter 2025/2026 soft launch):
• First children's business model development
• Testing framework for youth entrepreneurship
• Creating vetted model for Little Mini Market youth programs
• Building foundation for 2027 family business initiatives

• Primary Training Site: Established flagship location for veteran-focused programs
• The Farm at Leslie Court: Future community Garden Education Center (2027 formal launch)
• Future Expansion Model: "The Farm at [Location]" replicable framework for families joining the mission

Strategic Collaborations:
• Veteran service organizations
(training and participant recruitment)
• Agricultural education institutions
(expertise and curriculum support)
• Local food security organizations
(distribution partnerships)
• Faith-based communities
(land access and volunteer resources)
• Municipal entities
(community development initiatives)
Each component strengthens the others:
Teaching families to grow their own food creates self-sufficiency
Graduates become service providers and educators
The 2027 launch of The Farm at Leslie Court establishes a replicable model where:
This updated timeline reflects our focused approach to building each component systematically. Throughout 2026, we concentrate on establishing full operations at our primary Garden Education Center, graduating our first Local Food Heroes cohort, and launching our first mobile agricultural service operation. Sweet Bulb, launched in September 2025 for fundraising, will develop into an independent brand by Q4 2026.
The Slossberg Squeezery pilot program creates the youth entrepreneurship framework necessary for the Little Mini Market’s family programs in 2027. The November 2026 housing initiative provides crucial stability for program participants while preparing for the 2027 growing season expansion.
The Farm at Leslie Court, while mentioned as part of our future vision, will formally launch in 2027 as a community Garden Education Center, creating a replicable framework for expansion as mission-aligned families join the initiative.
This sequenced approach ensures each element is properly established before the next phase begins, creating a sustainable ecosystem for long-term community transformation through education and empowerment rather than dependency.
This material is based upon work supported by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture, through the Northeast Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education program under subaward number CNE25-001.
Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the view of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.