Prelaunch Status: TL&C Farmland is currently in the planning and funding phase. Program features, location, capacity, partnerships, and services are being developed as we secure land, licensing guidance, funding, and community partners.
Impact & Mission

We grow food.
We grow futures.

TL&C Farmland is building a residential agricultural program for young people ages 16–24, with priority on those aging out of foster care — combining housing stability, workforce training, wellness support, and long-term community.

🌿 Youth Ages 16–24 🏠 LGBTQ+-Affirming 🌱 Prelaunch Phase ✓ Chafee Eligible ✓ USDA Eligible
Our Mission

Built around a single, urgent problem

Youth aging out of foster care face some of the highest risks of homelessness, unemployment, and instability in the country — with no housing, no income, and no support system when they exit care. TL&C Farmland is being built to interrupt that cycle.

Mission Statement
TL&C Farmland provides transitional housing, agricultural training, and life-skills education to foster youth ages 18–24 in an affirming, farm-based community — so they can become self-sufficient adults.

The planned model includes a residential farm with tiny homes, aquaponic greenhouses, community spaces, and year-round food production. Youth are not visitors to the farm — they live here, work here, and own their path forward.

Who We Serve

  • Youth aging out of foster care, ages 16–24
  • LGBTQ+ youth and gender-expansive young people
  • Youth referred by DSS, case managers & courts
  • Youth with no stable housing or family support
  • Young people ready to build a self-sufficient life

What Makes Us Different

  • Residential model — youth live on-site
  • Food-producing farm, not just a training program
  • LGBTQ+-affirming & trauma-informed approach
  • Four integrated pillars — not siloed services
  • Employment outcomes, not just job readiness

The footprint of the program

Designed at a scale that creates real community — dense enough for peer support, manageable enough for individualized care.

10–25
Planned acres of farmland (site TBD)
15
Tiny homes for resident youth
6
Aquaponic greenhouses for year-round food production
18–24
Age range served (foster care transition)
$310K
Year 1 operating budget target
Program Model

Four pillars. One integrated model.

Most transitional programs address one need in isolation. TL&C Farmland integrates agriculture, life skills, education, and employment into a single residential experience — because young people don't have siloed needs.

Pillar 01 🌱

Agriculture

Youth operate aquaponic greenhouses and open-field growing operations year-round. They learn to cultivate, harvest, and sell food — developing discipline, patience, and a marketable trade in the growing local food economy.

Aquaponics certification Crop planning & rotation Food safety & handling Community market sales
Pillar 02 🏡

Life Skills

Youth leaving foster care often lack the practical skills the rest of us take for granted — budgeting, cooking, conflict resolution, renting an apartment. We teach these directly, in context, through daily residential life.

Financial literacy & budgeting Nutrition and meal planning Housing rights & renter skills Conflict resolution
Pillar 03 📚

Education

Many youth age out of foster care without a diploma or clear path to credential. TL&C Farmland connects residents to GED programs, community college pathways, workforce training, and continuing education — with on-site support.

GED / high school equivalency Community college partnerships Vocational certifications Digital literacy
Pillar 04 💼

Employment

Résumé and interview prep are not enough. TL&C Farmland creates real employment through farm operations, connects residents to local employers, and provides workforce mentorship — so youth leave with income, not just credentials.

On-farm paid work opportunities Future employer partnerships for career pathways Résumé, interview, and job search support Career mentorship from local professionals

We don't work in isolation

TL&C Farmland is embedded in Charlotte's existing foster care infrastructure. We work alongside the organizations that already serve these youth — not around them.

Youth Villages
National foster care transition leader. Provides case management support and referral pathways for youth aging out of care in the Charlotte metro area.
Referral Partner
Think of Us
National advocacy and data organization focused on foster care system reform. Alignment on LGBTQ+-affirming practices and data-informed program design.
Policy & Advocacy
FC2S (Foster Care to Success)
Provides scholarships, mentorship, and direct support to youth in extended foster care. Referral and co-enrollment pipeline for eligible residents.
Support Partner
SaySo (Strong Able Youth Speaking Out)
North Carolina's statewide youth advocacy organization for current and former foster youth. Informs program design and connects residents to peer support networks.
Youth Advocacy
Mecklenburg County DSS
Local Department of Social Services. Engaged as a potential primary referral source for youth aging out of care. Active engagement with case workers and child welfare staff.
Government
Local Farm & Workforce Employers
Local agricultural businesses, food co-ops, and employers — future sources of paid internship and employment pathways for TL&C Farmland graduates.
Employment Pipeline
Grant Alignment

Built for funder eligibility

TL&C Farmland was designed from the ground up to align with federal, state, and foundation grant categories. We are not retrofitting eligibility — these programs fit the model.

Federal — Foster Care

John H. Chafee Foster Care Program

TL&C Farmland directly targets the population and outcomes defined by Chafee: transitional housing, independent living skills, and support for youth ages 18–23 aging out of foster care.

Education & Training Vouchers Transitional Housing Eligible
Federal — Agriculture

USDA Youth Agriculture Programs

Our aquaponics greenhouses and open-field growing operations qualify for multiple USDA youth agriculture initiatives — including programs targeting underserved and at-risk youth populations.

USDA Farm Service Agency Beginning Farmer Programs 4-H / NIFA Youth
Foundation — LGBTQ+

LGBTQ+ Affirming Foundations

LGBTQ+ youth are disproportionately represented in foster care — up to 30% of the foster care population. TL&C Farmland's affirming model is aligned with funders supporting LGBTQ+ youth housing and transition.

Arcus Foundation Gill Foundation Human Rights Campaign Foundation
State — North Carolina

NC Independent Living Program

North Carolina administers Chafee funds through the NC Independent Living Program. TL&C Farmland is positioned as a direct service provider and referral destination for youth in NC's extended foster care.

NC DSS Partnership Independent Living Funds
Foundation — Youth Development

Youth Workforce & Development Funders

Our employment pillar — including on-farm paid work, employer partnerships, and job placement support — aligns with workforce development funders focused on young adults with barriers to employment.

Annie E. Casey Foundation Jim Casey Youth Opportunities
Foundation — Housing

Transitional & Affordable Housing Funders

The 15 tiny homes provide permanent transitional housing — an increasingly prioritized model for philanthropic housing funders tackling youth homelessness in metro areas.

HUD CoC Eligible Local Community Foundations
Ready to Go Deeper?

Access our full business plan,
financials, and program design

Our document library includes the full Business Plan, Financial Projections, Program Structure overview, and Executive Summary — all available for funders and partners.

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