Independent Restaurant Coalition (IRC) and Chase Announce 40 Recipients of Innovator Awards, Investing $1 Million in Small Businesses Driving Community and Sustainability
The First Iteration of the Grant Program Recognizes Innovative Social Impact Practices,
“The Innovator Award recipients are building a brighter future for independent restaurants,” said
“We’re proud to stand with the IRC to uplift small businesses that make neighborhoods more resilient,” said
The Innovator Awards are part of the IRC and Chase multi-year partnership, which also includes the
Common Threads
The 40 awardees were carefully selected for advancing replicable, values-driven practices that demonstrate measurable impact and potential to grow. Themes represented across this year’s recipients include:
- Community impact and civic engagement: restaurants functioning as hubs for cultural exchange, food access, education and advocacy, integrating community care into their core business models.
- Workforce well-being and equitable models: fair wages, pooled tips, profit sharing, childcare access, mental health resources and transparent financial practices that treat restaurant work as a respected profession.
- Sustainability and local sourcing: zero-waste kitchens, preservation and fermentation, closed-loop systems and regenerative farm partnerships that reduce environmental harm and strengthen regional supply chains.
- Cultural preservation and representation: honoring immigrant and Indigenous foodways, intergenerational leadership and neighborhood-rooted concepts that sustain local identity and economic opportunity.
Innovators Leading the Way
The Innovator Awards recipients demonstrate the many unique ways that independent restaurants serve their neighbors. Standout examples of sustainability, care for teams and community connection found across the US include:
-
Lita (
New Jersey ): A radically reimagined labor model where all staff rotate between front- and back-of-house roles, share equal base pay and pool tips across the team, promoting equity, empathy and long-term career sustainability. Grant funds will support training and documentation to share this replicable workforce approach. -
Immigrant Food (
Washington, D.C. ): A restaurant and nonprofit platform that translates food into civic engagement through menu design, partnerships and programming that celebrates immigrant cultures and advances immigrant rights. Funding will help scale community storytelling and advocacy initiatives. -
Miss Kim (Michigan ): A people-first restaurant model grounded in fair wages, profit sharing, open-book finance and staff education and scholarships, treating restaurant work as a respected profession. Grant support will help deepen transparent practices and expand workforce development programming. -
Güero (
Oregon ): A year-round community hub offering bilingual education, chef incubators, ecological programming and no-cost community access to space and resources, positioning restaurants as durable civic infrastructure. Grant funding will bolster education and incubator programming to broaden local impact. -
Magpie (
California ): A farm-driven restaurant that integrates preservation, waste reduction, whole-animal cooking and long-term relationships with regional producers, demonstrating disciplined sustainability embedded in everyday operations.
A full list of recipients is available upon request.
About
In
About Chase
Chase is the
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260325979462/en/
Press Contact:
press@independentrestaurantcoalition.com
victoria.messina@chase.com
Source: Chase