Dawn Gaetke wanted to grow and sell mushrooms from her suburban yard for some extra income.
After a year of working with Inver Grove Heights officials to change local rules, Gaetke's wish was granted this month — and she already has a modest crop of mushrooms sprouting from logs on her property.
"Having suburban market gardens is going to make our food system more resilient," she said. "What I'm doing is part of the local food movement."
Across the metro, suburban communities are allowing — and in some cases encouraging — residents to grow produce in community spaces or their own yards. The trend appears poised to grow to more communities, proponents and city officials said.
Inver Grove Heights changed a city ordinance to allow "market gardens," where residents can grow and sell food or flowers. In Burnsville, a grant-funded city initiative called Grow Burnsville includes a market garden, a community garden where residents can rent a plot and a "food forest," where people can pick free fruit and veggies to take home. Falcon Heights now allows edible landscaping and Maplewood began permitting market gardens, front yard gardens and permaculture in 2018.
Hayley Ball, executive director of Urban Roots, a St. Paul-based nonprofit contracted to help implement the Grow Burnsville project, said she hasn't seen the food forest model elsewhere in Minnesota.
"It's really interesting that a suburb is leading the way," Ball said, adding that suburbs often have more stringent zoning ordinances.
The gardens build on other agriculturally oriented ordinances cities have passed in recent years, such as those allowing residents to keep bees or chickens.