The Economic Nutrition label shows where the money goes

It really seemed the stuff of fairy tales when the program 60 Minutes told the story of how Fogo Island Inn, on a remote island off Newfoundland on Canada’s east coast, came to be. An islander (Zita Cobb) who got an education, headed off to Silicon Valley, made a fortune, and came back home to invest it in making life better at home.

By Paul Asman and Jill Lenoble – view of Fogo Island Inn, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=94622761

It is not an unusual story in some senses. That’s what a lot of people from other countries who come to work in the US and send their remittances home, aim to do – make life better at home. But what seems extraordinary to me, at any rate, is how effectively Fogo Island has applied the kind of asset-based community development principles that I’ve used in work internationally. Just like you can see a label on food and beverages you buy, you can find something called an “Economic Nutrition” label on the Fogo Island Inn website.

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