Fare For All, an affordable pop-up grocery store, ending service to metro

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Fare For All, an affordable pop-up grocery store, is ending service to the metro after its February stops.

The program, which includes monthly stops in St. Paul, Eagan, White Bear Lake and six other locations in the Twin Cities, will continue serving nine sites in Greater Minnesota, The Food Group announced to shoppers on Monday.

The nonprofit’s traveling grocery store is open to everyone, selling packs of fresh produce and frozen meat at up to 40 percent off retail prices — especially helpful in recent times, with rising grocery prices.

Another program, Twin Cities Mobile Market — a grocery store bus that visits neighborhoods mostly in St. Paul and Minneapolis — will continue service, the Food Group said.

An email to shoppers who use Fare For All was sent on Monday explaining the change.

“With food prices remaining high, we need to invest our resources in communities that lack grocery store access,” the email stated. “We know this news may be disappointing, and we want to acknowledge the real impact this change may have for you and your household.”

The grocery landscape

The grocery landscape has changed since Fare For All began in 2002; it has operated under its current model (including no pre-registration required) since 2008.

“Having more affordable grocery options can really mean that we see fewer participating at Fare for All,” said Sophia Lenarz-Coy, executive director of The Food Group.

Aldi, the popular discount grocery chain, opened its first location in the Twin Cities in 2003. Consumers in the metro can also find grocery deals at Sam’s Club and Costco, in addition to other grocery stores and options such as Walmart and even Dollar chains. In the growing season, affordable produce can be found at farmers’ markets.

Recent events may have also played a role, Lenarz-Coy says.

“We’ve seen at several of our metro locations much less participation than a few years ago,” she says. “It was an interesting dynamic where, when COVID hit, there were obviously major disruptions, and many of our sites never got back to those pre-COVID levels in the metro.”

Before the pandemic, in 2018, Fare For All served 53,317 households. In 2025, it was 34,343, or a decrease of about 36%, according to the Food Group.

Food sourcing is also more challenging, she says, due to retail competition and inventory changes.

“Back in 2008, there were more ways we could find really good deals on things, especially frozen meat,” says Lenarz-Coy. “Our sourcing team has to work harder and harder.”

For all these reasons, in addition to rising costs, the nonprofit reassessed where this program is most needed.

“We started to think about, as an organization, how do we best invest our resources?” Lenarz-Coy says.

Early reaction

Reaction to the news was mixed on Fare For All’s Facebook page. They include:

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“I live on social security and this makes me very sad as it really helped me.”

“I’m so very saddened by this, as I’ve frequented the White Bear location for over 15 years! Thank you guys for all you’ve done!”

“The assumption that those using fare for all are all low income isn’t true.”

“Bad bad timing! I am positive that inner city folks could sure benefit from Fare for All services during this time! I think they should have thought this out better.”

“Thx for all the meals you made possible. I will miss you in the metro.”

Looking forward

The Food Group is larger than a couple of grocery store programs: The nonprofit partners with food shelves, community organizations and farmers across Minnesota, working toward food justice and equity.

As for the Fare For All program, metro shoppers can still stock up on the meat and produce deals for now.

“We will still have all our sites in February, so we’ll be sending staff to chat with people in person, answer questions and include a flier of other local resources at each of our sites, too,” says Lenarz-Coy.

The February schedule includes a stop at the West Seventh Community Center at 265 Oneida St. in St. Paul from 10 a.m. to noon on Friday, Feb. 13.

As of March, though, Fare For All will no longer make its nine metro stops in St. Paul, White Bear Lake, Eagan, South St. Paul, Burnsville, Fridley, Bloomington, Richfield and New Hope.

Stops will continue beyond the metro at nine sites in North Branch, Mankato, Hutchinson, Red Wing, Rush City, Buffalo, St. Cloud (two locations) and St. Joseph.

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We asked if participation is also down at these “rural” sites.

“It is slightly lower at our rural FFA (Fare For All) sites today than in the metro,” said Emily Eddy White, director of advancement and culture, in an email to the Pioneer Press. “However, the main driver of the decision to continue the program in Greater Minnesota is about equitable grocery access. We are also differentiating our two affordable grocery programs geographically with Twin Cities Mobile Market remaining in the metro.”

For the complete schedule and more info on Fare For All, visit thefoodgroupmn.org/groceries/fare-for-all/schedule/.

Message to Fare For All shoppers

Here is the email sent to shoppers on Monday for the St. Paul stop with the subject line of “Important Update: Fare For All Services in the Metro Area”:

Dear West 7th FFA customer,

We hope you’re doing okay during these challenging and heavy times in our community. We are writing to share an important and difficult update about Fare For All services in the metro area. After thoughtful consideration, The Food Group has made the difficult decision to close metro Fare For All sites. With this change the Fare For All program will be focused on rural communities. We will continue to operate and invest in Twin Cities Mobile Market as our metro affordable grocery solution. Fare For All services at metro sites will close after February 2026.

We know this news may be disappointing, and we want to acknowledge the real impact this change may have for you and your household. We also want to acknowledge the difficulty of this news while we navigate such a challenging and heavy time in our community. Please know that this decision was not made lightly. We know that this directly impacts families who rely on Fare For All at West 7th to put food on the table each month. For many years, it has been our privilege to serve metro communities by providing access to affordable, nutritious food. We are deeply grateful for the trust you have placed in us and for the relationships built through Fare For All.

Both Fare For All and Twin Cities Mobile Market have the mission to make foods more accessible and affordable. We are needing to focus on program efficiency, differentiating geographically, and setting these programs up for long term success. With food prices remaining high, we need to invest our resources in communities that lack grocery store access. While Fare For All will no longer operate at metro sites, during these challenging times we remain committed to food access and to serving communities in meaningful ways. We will continue to support communities through our mission and programs which include rapidly responding to ensure fear is not a barrier to immigrant communities accessing food.

2/13/2026 will be the final distribution at the West 7th Fare for All location.

Thank you for being part of the Fare For All community. We truly appreciate the opportunity to have served you.

Today in History: February 4, Heiress Patricia Hearst kidnapped

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Today is Wednesday, Feb. 4, the 35th day of 2026. There are 330 days left in the year.

Today in history:

On Feb. 4, 1974, newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst, 19, was kidnapped in California by the radical Symbionese Liberation Army. Hearst was caught on camera participating in a bank robbery with the extremist group that April and subsequently found guilty of bank robbery and sentenced to seven years in prison. (President Jimmy Carter commuted her sentence, and she was later pardoned.)

Also on this date:

In 1789, electors unanimously chose George Washington to be the first president of the United States.

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In 1801, John Marshall took office as chief justice of the United States, a position he would hold for 34 years.

In 1945, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin began a wartime conference at Yalta.

In 1976, more than 23,000 people died when a severe earthquake struck Guatemala with a magnitude of 7.5.

In 1997, a civil jury in Santa Monica, California, found O.J. Simpson liable for the deaths of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald Goldman, ordering Simpson to pay $33.5 million to the victims’ families.

In 2004, Facebook had its beginnings as Harvard student Mark Zuckerberg launched “TheFacebook.”

In 2013, British scientists announced that skeletal remains they had discovered during an excavation beneath a Leicester, England parking lot were, beyond reasonable doubt, the remains of 15th century monarch King Richard III.

In 2023, the U.S. shot down a suspected Chinese spy balloon over the Atlantic Ocean, saying it was equipped with high-tech gear for a military-linked aerial surveillance program. China denied the balloon was used for spying on sensitive North American military sites, insisting the flyover was an accident involving a weather balloon.

Today’s birthdays:

Former Argentine President Isabel Peron is 95.
Rock singer Alice Cooper is 78.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is 73.
Football Hall of Famer Lawrence Taylor is 67.
Country singer Clint Black is 64.
Boxing Hall of Famer Oscar De La Hoya is 53.
Singer Natalie Imbruglia is 51.
Rapper Cam’ron is 50.
Singer-songwriter Gavin DeGraw is 49.
Olympic gymnastics gold medalist Carly Patterson is 38.
Actor Edvin Ryding is 23.

Driver arrested after police say he fatally struck pedestrian in St. Paul

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Police arrested a driver after they say he fatally struck a pedestrian in St. Paul on Tuesday night.

Officers responded to Front Avenue and Grotto Street in the Como neighborhood shortly before 6:30 p.m. and found a man lying in the street with severe head injuries, according to Nikki Muehlhausen, a St. Paul police spokesperson.

St. Paul Fire Department medics pronounced the man dead at the scene.

Preliminary information suggests the driver, after striking the pedestrian, did a U-turn and parked on the other side of the street, Muehlhausen said. Officers found the man there. He was taken into custody on suspicion of criminal vehicular homicide.

The police department’s Traffic and Pedestrian Safety Unit is leading the investigation.

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Man wielding butcher knife at Cottage Grove Elementary arrested

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Cottage Grove Elementary School was placed into a lockdown on Tuesday afternoon after a man with a butcher knife tried to get into the building.

Officers from the Cottage Grove Police Department responded just before noon to a report that someone was at the school waving a butcher knife and possibly intoxicated, police said in a statement posted on social media.

A caller told police that the man had been seen “driving erratically in the school’s parking lot,” police said.

“All students and staff of the school are safe,” police said. “The individual never went beyond the locked vestibule, and responding officers were able to safely apprehend the individual without incident.”

A 46-year-old Cottage Grove man was arrested within six minutes of the initial call. He was taken to the Washington County Jail in Stillwater.

“The safety of our students and staff is our absolute priority,” South Washington County Schools Superintendent Julie Nielsen wrote in a letter to families sent Tuesday night. “We are incredibly grateful for the swift response of our school team and the Cottage Grove Police Department.”

Nielsen credited “secured entryways provided by taxpayer support” with playing a critical role in keeping everyone safe.

“Please continue to support our work in staying vigilant and reporting potential issues immediately,” she wrote. “It takes all of us working together to ensure our communities are safe places to live and learn.”

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