Since 2022, the BFF Rapid Response Fund has deployed over $233k across the Northeast to farming and food businesses experiencing emergencies

When disaster strikes, waiting for help shouldn’t be part of the problem. Our rapid funding process is designed to get financial support into the hands of businesses facing one-time emergencies—fast.

Whether it's damage to your farm, unexpected supply chain disruptions, or other sudden challenges, we’re here to help you bounce back and continue making an impact.

Our funding decisions aren’t made in a vacuum—they're guided by a committee of trusted community members who understand your needs.

We prioritize businesses and projects that have been serving their communities for at least a year, ensuring that the funds go where they’re needed most. From farmers to herbalists and food entrepreneurs, we support those who keep our food systems thriving. Learn about the committee below.

We’re here for Black-owned businesses and projects in the food and farming sector across the Northeast. If you're based in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont, New Jersey, New York, or Pennsylvania, and have an established business facing an emergency, you may be eligible for support.

However, please note that our fund does not cover regular operational or start-up expenses—we’re here to help in times of crisis.


Visit our community resource page or sign up for our newsletter to learn about other funding opportunities, community events, and more!

Fill out the interest form for BFF Fund 2.0 to learn more about funding for Operational Costs

Not in an emergency situation but interested in support?

Fill out our interest form.


For questions, please contact

rapidresponsefund@
blackfarmerfund.com


Past Recipients


Meet the Rapid Response Fund Committee

kenya crumel

Kenya Crumel manages the Black Land & Power initiative at the National Black Food & Justice Alliance (NBFJA), a coalition of Black-led food justice organizations and farmers working collectively towards Black food sovereignty and land justice.

Working with partners to remove 15 million acres of land from the speculative market for the benefit of Black farmers and land stewards, Kenya along with a council of seven NBFJA members, piloted the Resource Commons in 2023 to provide non-extractive capital to Black farmers to secure land and equipment or build infrastructure.

Prior to joining NBFJA in January 2021, Kenya spent 25 years working in the community development field implementing and managing programs that build the capacity of community-based organizations.

adjoa kittoe

Adjoa Kittoe is a strategist and storyteller with over a decade in the food industry, spanning culinary arts, media and sustainability. A former chef and founder of Seulful, she transitioned from crafting Modern West African cuisine to strengthening food systems through marketing, advocacy and social enterprise.

She works at the intersection of food, business and social impact, applying a triple bottom line approach (people, planet, and profit) to build resilient food systems. Her work connects technology, education, and ancestral farming knowledge to improve access, equity and sustainability, with a strong focus on Black land stewards and food entrepreneurs.

Through strategic communications and advocacy, Adjoa challenges narratives, builds connections, and drives change in food, agriculture and sustainability.

Claudel Zaka Chery

Claudel Zaka Chery, a Haitian Poet and Film Director, now Farmer moved to Newbury, VT from Jacmel-Haiti in 2011. He was the assistant to the director of FOSAJ. Both Mr McGarrell and Zaka ran the Jacmel Art Center with great energy and taste.

On 12 January 2010, his beloved country of Haiti entered a nightmare from which there was no hope of waking. The earthquake devastated Zaka’s life and plans. He was working on a film about water and had arranged to climb into the hills above Jacmel around a waterfall and the people that live and work around it. This would never come to be for reasons of force majeure. Nonetheless ideas that are truncated re-emerge in other settings, sometimes with even more force and beauty.

In January 2018 he and his wife Jette found the ideal piece of property they were looking for on Fish Pond Rd in Wells River, VT. A 51 acre parcel of land, 17 acres of pasture and 30 acres of lush hardwood and maple forest.


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