All Mobile Market shoppers will receive 20% off their purchase on April 21 – 23 when they present a library card from any library!
[LOWELL, MA] – Lowell-based food justice non-profit Mill City Grows (MCG) is celebrating National Library Week with a special promotion at their three (3) Mobile Farmers Markets on Tuesday, April 21 – Thursday, April 23. All Mobile Market shoppers who show their library card to MCG staff will receive a 20% discount on their total purchase. Library cards can be from ANY library, including out of state. The Pollard Memorial Library Bookmobile will be at all three Mobile Markets for anyone who would like to sign up for a card. Everyone who signs up for a card at the Bookmobile can receive their 20% discount!
“Mill City Grows is proud to celebrate libraries, especially Lowell’s Pollard Memorial Library,” said Courtney McSparron, Co-Executive Director of Mill City Grows. “We love working with other organizations dedicated to helping all the citizens of Lowell learn, grow, and spend time together.”
Complete details on this special promotion are at MillCityGrows.org/library-week
Participating Mill City Grows Mobile Markets, April 21 – 23:
Tuesday, April 21 • 1pm – 3pm
ROOT Community Space at Mill City Grows, 19 Hall Street, Lowell
Wednesday, April 22 • 11am -1pm
Project Kompass, 192 Appleton Street, Lowell
Thursday, April 23 • 10am – 12pm
Lowell Senior Center, 276 Broadway Street, Lowell
About National Library Week
National Library Week is an annual event presented by the American Library Association that celebrates and highlights the valuable role libraries and library professionals play in transforming lives and strengthening our communities. This year, National Library Week runs from Sunday, April 19 – Saturday, April 25, with the theme “Find Your Joy.” The Honorary Chair for 2026 is social media personality and passionate California librarian, Mychal Threets.
About Mill City Grows
Mill City Grows believes when a community is given access to fresh food and knowledge of how to grow and prepare delicious, healthy meals, people will enjoy better quality of life and have a deeper connection to each other and their environment. Since 2011, MCG has worked towards food justice in Lowell through these dynamic hands-on programs and strategies: education in and out of schools, supporting community leadership through community gardens, urban farming, mobile markets, and empowering people to produce their own food. For more information on what’s growing in Lowell and how you can become a part of the city’s thriving local food movement, visit MillCityGrows.org.
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