Anaina Hou adds new fees, layout to offset market costs

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

Jill Lowry, executive director of Anaina Hou Community Park in Kilauea, attributes some of the increasing costs of the farmers’ market there to an increase in attendees. “Pre-pandemic we always rode at the break-even point, enough to where we could absorb the losses, and at times that we did. But the numbers (then) were (about) a quarter or half of what we’re seeing now as far as attendees,” she said.

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

A booth is still full of produce early at Saturday morning’s farmers’ market at Anaina Hou Community Park in Kilauea. Currently, farmers pay $25 per week for a booth. The new booth fee is $30 a week, but that will only apply to new farmers joining the market.

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

The Anaina Hou Community Park farmers’ market in Kilauea is seen Saturday. Dividing the market into three separate areas allows additional space for parking and vendors.

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

A market attendee donates $2 to the nonprofit Anaina Hou Community Park that operates the Kilauea farmers’ market. The park is trying to offset an average weekly loss of $1,600 through a suggested donation of $1 per attendee. At Saturday’s market $564 was raised.

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

According to Executive Director Jill Lowry of Anaina Hou Community Park, the farmers’ market at the Kilauea venue is at risk of shutting down if the nonprofit organization can’t find a way to offset the market’s weekly financial losses.

KILAUEA — The Anaina Hou Community Park farmers’ market was a bustling scene on Saturday, with full parking lots and lines of people waiting patiently for food from their favorite vendors.

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