Food Access Starts With People
VETERANS + FAMILIES + NEIGHBORS
2026 - 2028 Strategic Initiative
Building Resilience in Rural Food Deserts
Every person, in every community, deserves access to the food they need to thrive for life.
Across Missouri’s 100+ food deserts, rural access barriers are shaped by long drives, limited transportation, and few nearby options—forcing people to leave their communities just to meet basic needs.
When access depends on distance, systems become fragile—and communities feel it first.
GOTURSIX is a Veteran-founded 501(c)(3) nonprofit charity strengthening rural food systems through locally rooted, community-driven solutions in southwest Missouri.
Why This Matters
Food shouldn’t be a long drive or a hard ask.
According to the United States Department of Agriculture, many Missouri communities qualify as food deserts—places where a grocery store is more than 10 miles away. In these areas, food access depends on time, distance, and systems that can fail quickly.
Strengthening access closer to home reduces risk, increases resilience, and keeps communities connected when larger systems fall short.
This USDA map shows how far many Missourians have to go just to buy groceries. The highlighted areas represent communities where food access depends on distance, time, and systems that can fail quickly—underscoring the importance of strengthening access closer to home.
Solutions Anchored in Community
At the center of this effort is the Hellbender Third Space—a network of shared spaces where food, connection, recreation, and local production come together. We start with food because it opens the door to show up better, together.
Located in Wright County within the service area of Ozarks Food Harvest’s service region—we work alongside existing food access partners to shorten distance, reduce dependence on fragile systems, and keep resources circulating locally.
Feedback from our 2025 year of service led us to refine our strategic focus toward the most urgent and shared need identified by Veterans, Families, and Neighbors alike: reliable food access close to home.
Consistency matters. When food access is predictable and nearby:
Isolation decreases
Participation increases
Neighbors are better able to care for one another
Through shared spaces and local participation, food reaches people in multiple ways:
Shared meals
Locally produced food
Blessings Boxes
Mobile pop-ups
Deliveries
Volunteer-supported connection
These touchpoints support dignity while strengthening local capacity.
With sustained investment and full implementation of our 2026–2028 strategic plan, GOTURSIX anticipates a 50–75% improvement in local food-system resilience, reflected in greater consistency, redundancy, and neighbor-to-neighbor support during disruption.
Hellbender Third Space : Where Food Access Takes Shape
Named for the endangered and resilient Ozark Hellbender, the Hellbender Third Space is rooted in a simple belief: communities thrive when the conditions that sustain them are protected.
Based in Hartville, Missouri, the Third Space brings together:
Food access
Local production
Shared gathering
Recreation and learning
We start with food—because shared nourishment builds trust. From there, participation grows, connections deepen, and resilience takes hold.
The Hellbender Third Space is not a single program. It is a network of shared spaces and experiences designed to bring food closer to people and neighbors closer to one another.
When people are fed, they show up better—for themselves and for each other.
FOOD SHOULDN’T BE A LONG DRIVE OR A HARD ASK
This USDA map shows how far many Missourians have to go just to buy groceries. The highlighted areas represent communities where food access depends on distance, time, and systems that can fail quickly—underscoring the importance of strengthening access closer to home.
Thank You, Veterans and Families.
Named after the Ozark Hellbender, a rare and resilient giant salamander,
the Hellbender Third Space is
dedicated to those who served and those who have their back.
