80743.
(a) Of the moneys available pursuant to Section 80740, two hundred seventy million dollars ($270,000,000) shall be available to the Department of Food and Agriculture for grants to ensure communities and tribes are able to obtain or produce foods that are healthy, are nutrient dense, are culturally relevant, reflect traditional Native American foodways, and are grown or produced in California, prioritizing California-produced organic food products, for residents who are food insecure or members of a disadvantaged community.(b) The Department of Food and Agriculture, in coordination with the State Department of Public Health, California Department of Aging, State Department of Social Services, and other agencies, shall competitively award grants pursuant to this section to nonprofit organizations, county, city, or tribal governments, tribal organizations, tribal entities, or producers.
(c) In awarding grants pursuant to this section, the Department of Food and Agriculture shall prioritize projects for which a one-time infusion of state dollars will help the project become self-sustaining.
(d) Grant moneys awarded pursuant to this section may be used for any of the following purposes:
(1) Developing year-round infrastructure for certified farmers’ markets, as defined in Section 47004 of the Food and Agricultural Code, or tribe-operated farmers’ markets on Indian Reservations to provide shoppers with high-quality fresh produce sold by California producers with a certified producer’s certificate issued pursuant to Section 47020 of the Food and Agricultural Code, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
(A) Infrastructure such as canopies and shade structures, tables and seating, market stalls, restrooms and hand wash stations, tent weights and tie-downs, produce washing stations, barricades and bollards for traffic management and pedestrian safety, bicycle parking racks, and other equipment.
(B) Facilities for food preparation, cooking demonstrations, and other nutrition education.
(C) Wireless electronic benefits transfer point of sale terminals for market managers and producers to process CalFresh transactions.
(D) Wireless electronic benefits transfer point of sale terminals for producers to accept the electronic cash value benefit through the program designed to implement the federal WIC Farmers’ Market Nutrition Act of 1992 (Public Law 102-314) pursuant to Section 123279 of the Health and Safety Code.
(E) Other equipment to support the Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program, as described in Section 3007 of Title 7 of the United States Code.
(2) Creating or expanding community-supported agriculture programs, as defined in Section 47060 of the Food and Agricultural Code, including, but not limited to, expenditures for either of the following purposes:
(A) Facilities and supplies for storing, packing, or establishing a main pickup point for produce.
(B) Delivery vehicles for transporting produce directly to residents in disadvantaged communities.
(3) (A) Creating or expanding community food gardens, including community food producers as defined in Section 113752 of the Health and Safety Code, city and suburban agriculture using backyard, rooftop, or balcony gardening, indoor gardening, community gardening in vacant lots and parks, roadside urban fringe agriculture, and livestock grazing in open space, including for any of the following purposes:
(i) Lumber, irrigation systems, electrification projects, tool sheds, greenhouses, fencing, on-site refrigeration for food storage, and vehicles.
(ii) Equipment for food preparation, cooking demonstrations, and agricultural education.
(iii) Other community food garden equipment and supplies.
(iv) Construction of community food gardens at multiunit housing facilities, vacant lots, places of worship, tribal communities, hospitals, and schools.
(v) Purchase of land, prioritizing ownership by community or accredited land trusts.
(vi) Construction of developments that combine housing with farms or community gardens and benefit residents of vulnerable populations or residents located in disadvantaged communities.
(vii) Construction of urban-edge agriculture parks to be leased as multiple small farms for sustainable farming to produce food.
(viii) Local building, permitting, or planning fees incurred throughout the design, review, or construction process to create or expand a community food garden.
(B) Grant moneys awarded pursuant to this paragraph shall primarily benefit disadvantaged communities.
(C) A project funded pursuant to this paragraph shall not be required to have a minimum acreage or minimum amount of production income.
(4) (A) In disadvantaged communities and areas without easy access to supermarkets or grocery stores, creating or expanding mobile produce markets, mobile farmers markets, mobile food carts for selling produce, and mobile food pantries for donating fresh fruits and vegetables, including for any of the following purposes:
(i) The purchase or lease of a bus, truck, van, cart, or other vehicle with space to display produce.
(ii) Retrofitting a vehicle or refrigeration and food safety infrastructure.
(iii) Wireless electronic benefits transfer point of sale terminals for mobile produce markets and mobile farmers’ markets to process CalFresh transactions.
(B) Grant moneys awarded pursuant to this paragraph for the lease or purchase of vehicles shall prioritize fuel-efficient or zero-emission vehicles.
(5) Creating or expanding healthy food access outlets, including to provide infrastructure investments for healthy food access outlets, including food retail, food service, and grocery or meal dropoff facilities, in affordable housing developments or through home delivery, including, but not limited to, any of the following expansions of community or tribal-owned healthy food access outlets:
(A) The Healthy Stores Refrigeration Grant Program created pursuant to Section 49015 of the Food and Agricultural Code, including refrigeration units provided to convenience stores, corner stores, food service facilities, grocery stores located in rural communities or on Indian Reservations, and for use in mobile produce markets.
(B) Refrigeration units in community fridges run through mutual aid projects.
(6) (A) Expanding Food is Medicine programs administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, in collaboration with the California Department of Aging and the federal Indian Health Service.
(B) Grant moneys awarded pursuant to this paragraph shall prioritize infrastructure for the production and distribution of medically tailored meals pursuant to the Medically Tailored Meals Pilot Program established pursuant to Section 14042.1 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, and to support produce prescriptions and food pharmacies, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
(i) Production scale commercial kitchens.
(ii) Refrigeration and freezer capacity.
(iii) Refrigerated vehicles.
(iv) Building improvements to expand capacity for providers of medically tailored meals, produce prescriptions, and food pharmacies.
(C) For purposes of this paragraph, “Food is Medicine programs” are programs prescribed by health care professionals that are designed to meet the dietary and health needs of vulnerable people with chronic and acute illnesses through the Medically Tailored Meals Pilot Program established pursuant to Section 14042.1 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.
(7) Expanding infrastructure to support farm to senior programs that improve senior access to California grown and produced food, focusing on local organic produce and local meat, poultry, and dairy products.
(e) Up to 10 percent of the grant moneys awarded pursuant to this section may be allocated for technical assistance and workforce development for purposes of this section, including training to support the procurement of California-produced organic food.