Moncton · Dieppe · New Brunswick

Not For Greed Corporation

Necessities at cost. Luxury carries profit.
Members pool purchasing power, invest in local suppliers, and build a self-sustaining cycle that works for everyone.

Join the Club How It Works

The groceries you need to survive carry a 25-40% markup.

The soap, the toothpaste, the heat — every basic necessity is a profit center for someone who doesn't need the money.

Meanwhile, the people producing the actual goods — the farmers, the makers — get squeezed harder every year.

25-40% Grocery markup on basics
~8% What the farmer actually gets
200:1 CEO-to-worker pay ratio (avg)

The Necessities

These are the things every human needs to survive and live with dignity. They should flow at cost — no one should profit off someone's need to eat, stay warm, or stay clean.

🍞

Food

Staples, fresh produce, protein, dairy — the fuel that keeps us alive.

💧

Water

Clean drinking water. Accessible to all, always.

🏠

Shelter

A roof, heat, basic comfort. Not a luxury — a right.

Energy

Heating, electricity, cooking fuel. Staying warm shouldn't bankrupt you.

🧼

Hygiene & Health

Soap, toothpaste, menstrual products, basic medicine, first aid.

👕

Clothing

Basic, durable essentials. Not fashion — function.

🚗

Transportation

Getting to work, to food, to family. Mobility is access.

📱

Communication

Phone, internet — the infrastructure of modern participation.

The Cycle

A self-sustaining loop. Member capital invests in local suppliers. Suppliers provide at cost. Members save money and attract more members. The cycle grows itself.

1

Members Join & Buy Shares

Members pay a small annual fee and optionally buy shares in NFG. This creates the capital pool.

2

Capital Invests in Local Suppliers

NFG uses the capital pool to invest in local farms, producers, and businesses — pre-purchasing inventory, funding equipment, guaranteeing volume.

3

Suppliers Provide at Near-Cost

In exchange for guaranteed volume and investment, suppliers provide necessities at near-cost pricing — passing savings directly to members.

4

Members Save 20-40%

Members access food, hygiene, energy, and other necessities at actual cost — not retail markup. The savings are real and immediate.

5

Savings Attract More Members

Word spreads. More people join for the savings. More members = more capital = more investment in local suppliers.

6

Surplus Reinvested

Any surplus at year-end goes back into the cycle: worker profit share, community dividends, growth reserve, and a community impact fund.

↻ The cycle repeats. Each turn grows the community, strengthens local suppliers, and reduces dependence on profit-driven supply chains.

Two Paths for Every Necessity

For each category of need, NFG pursues the most effective path — whichever gets necessities to members at the lowest sustainable price.

PATH A — Partner

Negotiate with Local Suppliers

We approach local farms, producers, and businesses with collective volume. They provide at near-cost; we guarantee demand and invest in their growth.

  • Identify local suppliers for each necessity
  • Leverage collective purchasing power for volume discounts
  • Invest capital in supplier infrastructure (equipment, land, facilities)
  • Guarantee pre-purchase volume to de-risk supplier operations
  • Suppliers keep their independence — we're a customer, not an owner
PATH B — Build

Start Our Own Store

If no local supplier will provide at near-cost, NFG starts its own business unit to fill the gap. Member capital funds it; member demand sustains it.

  • Identify gaps where suppliers won't negotiate
  • Use member capital to start a co-op business unit
  • Operate at cost — no markup, no profit extraction
  • Hire from within the membership (worker members)
  • Surplus from the unit goes back into the cycle

Local Suppliers

Real businesses in the Moncton / Dieppe area that we're connecting with. This list grows as NFG builds relationships.

🌾 Food — Local Farms

Direct-from-farm purchasing. Bulk meat splitting, seasonal produce, farm-gate pricing.

Boudreau Meat Market
Farm / Butcher
Local beef, chicken, pork, lamb, eggs, Halal selection. Free delivery over $45.
1640 Rue Principale, Memramcook · boudreaumeat.ca · (506) 758-2992
Spring Brook Farms
Farm
Grass-fed beef, pasture-raised chicken, apple-finished pork, eggs. No GMOs/hormones.
South Branch, NB · springbrookfarms.ca · (506) 523-6432
Memramcook Valley Farms
Farm
100% grass-fed beef, hormone/antibiotic-free. 3rd generation, since 1938.
1569 Principale, Memramcook · grassfednb.ca
Stirling Fruit Farms
Farm / Retailer
Fresh fruits, vegetables, frozen meats, baked goods. Farm market open 7 days/week.
840 Shediac Rd, Moncton · (506) 856-8281
Hardy's Produce
Farm / Retailer
Seasonal vegetables, fresh produce. Family-owned.
Cap-Pelé farm · retail at 1063 Mount Rd, Moncton area

📦 Food — Wholesale & Bulk

Bulk purchasing power. Restaurant-grade quantities at wholesale prices.

Sysco Moncton
Wholesaler / Distributor
Full-service food distributor — bulk staples, produce, meat, dairy, frozen.
460 MacNaughton Ave, Moncton · sysco.ca · (506) 857-8115
Wholesale Club (Loblaw)
Wholesaler / Retailer
Bulk groceries, meat, produce, dairy, janitorial supplies. No membership required.
520 St George Blvd, Moncton
UNIPCO Purchasing Program
Buying Group
100% member-owned foodservice buying group. $120M+ purchasing power. Rebates to members.
860 Main St, Moncton · 1-877-857-9625 · unipco.com
Kennedy Distribution
Distributor
Specialty food ingredients — dairy, dry goods for Atlantic food industry.
50 Driscoll Cres, Moncton · (506) 859-0008
Bulk Barn (Dieppe)
Bulk Retailer
Bulk grains, flours, spices, nuts, dried fruit, snacks.
18 Champlain St, Dieppe · bulkbarn.ca

🤝 Food — Co-ops & Markets

Existing community food networks and farmers' markets.

Community Food Smart
Buying Club
Bulk produce buying club — affordable fruits & vegetables from local farmers. Monthly food bag.
Various NB pickup locations · communityfoodsmart.ca
Really Local Harvest
Co-op / Network
Local food network connecting consumers with SE NB farms.
Dieppe Market area · recoltedecheznous.com
Moncton Market
Farmers' Market
100+ Atlantic Canadian growers, producers, artisans under one roof.
Downtown Moncton · marchemonctonmarket.ca
Buy Local NB
Directory
Comprehensive directory of local NB farms and food products.
Province-wide · buylocalnb.ca

⚡ Energy & Heating

Electricity, natural gas, propane, heating oil. Keeping warm shouldn't bankrupt you.

NB Power
Crown Corporation / Utility
Provincial electricity utility. Efficiency programs & incentives available.
275 MacNaughton Ave, Moncton · 1-800-663-6272 · nbpower.com
Liberty Utilities
Utility / Distributor
Natural gas distribution — sole licensed NG distributor in NB.
Moncton service area · naturalgasnb.com
Green Coast Energy
Distributor / Retailer
Heating oil delivery, propane, diesel. Equipment installation & service.
132 Beaverbrook St, Moncton · (506) 855-8500 · greencoastenergy.ca
Avenir Energy
Distributor
Propane delivery (residential & commercial). Serves Moncton, Dieppe, Riverview, Shediac.
335 MacNaughton Ave, Moncton · avenirenergy.ca
Wilsons Heating
Distributor / Service
Family-owned propane delivery & heat pump systems since 1996.
560 Edinburgh Dr, Moncton · (506) 855-8459 · wilsonsheating.ca

🧼 Hygiene & Health

Soap, toothpaste, menstrual products, basic medicine, first aid. Dignity in bulk.

Costco Wholesale
Wholesale / Retailer
Bulk hygiene: soap, toothpaste, menstrual products, OTC medicine, first aid, vitamins.
140 Granite Dr, Moncton · (506) 858-7959
FCS Wholesale Supplies
Wholesaler / Distributor
Eco-friendly cleaning chemicals, janitorial/hygiene supplies. Delivers across NB.
Serves Moncton · fcswholesalesupplies.ca
Shoppers Drug Mart (Dieppe)
Pharmacy / Retailer
Full pharmacy, OTC medicine, first aid, personal hygiene products.
18 Champlain St, Dieppe · (506) 389-1680
Bargains Group
Wholesaler (Online)
Wholesale hygiene kits — soap, deodorant, oral care, feminine hygiene in bulk. Ships to NB.
bargainsgroup.com

👕 Clothing — Affordable Sources

Basic, durable essentials. Thrift and affordable options for function, not fashion.

Value Village
Thrift Retailer
Used clothing (all ages), shoes, household goods. Large selection.
15 Plaza Blvd, Moncton · (506) 382-3003
Salvation Army Thrift (Elmwood)
Thrift / Non-profit
Pre-loved clothing, housewares, furniture, electronics.
300 Elmwood Dr, Moncton · (506) 859-8305
Salvation Army Thrift (Mountain Rd)
Thrift / Non-profit
Pre-loved clothing and housewares for the whole family.
1185 Mountain Rd, Moncton · (506) 855-8443
Mission Thrift Store
Thrift / Non-profit
Used clothing, household items. Community-focused.
40 Morton Ave, Moncton · (506) 857-4040
Guy's Frenchy's
Thrift Retailer
Popular NB thrift/used clothing chain. Affordable used clothing.
Multiple NB locations · guysfrenchys.com

🚗 Transportation

Getting to work, to food, to family. Mobility is access.

Codiac Transpo
Public Transit
Bus transit serving Moncton, Dieppe, Riverview. 19 routes. ~$3.25/trip. Free for kids under 12.
140 Millennium Blvd, Moncton · (506) 857-2008 · codiactranspo.ca
Maritime Bus
Intercity Bus
Inter-city bus across NB, NS, PEI. Terminal at VIA Rail Station.
77 Canada Drive, Moncton · 1-800-575-1807 · maritimebus.com
VIA Rail
Rail Service
Passenger rail to Halifax, Montreal, Quebec City.
77 Canada Drive, Moncton · viarail.ca

Note: This is a living list. We're actively reaching out to these suppliers to negotiate near-cost pricing for NFG members. Know a local supplier we should add? Tell us.

What You'd Save

Real prices, real savings. Compare what you pay at the grocery store vs what NFG members pay through bulk, wholesale, and farm-direct purchasing.

25-50% Off food & groceries
30-45% Off hygiene & health
65% Off fresh produce (Food Smart)
$1,200+ Avg annual family savings
Item Retail NFG Member You Save
FOOD — STAPLES
Rice (per kg) $1.88–$2.25 $1.40–$1.75 22–25%
Flour (per kg) $0.90–$1.20 $0.66–$0.74 25–35%
Cooking oil (per L) $2.25–$3.25 $1.60–$2.50 20–30%
Sugar (per kg) $1.37–$2.00 $0.90–$1.10 25–35%
Canned tomatoes (796ml) $1.99–$2.99 $1.25–$1.75 30–40%
FOOD — PROTEIN
Ground beef (per kg) $14.67–$17.50 $10.35–$13.00 15–25%
Chicken breast (per kg) $22.00–$28.00 $8.80–$12.13 50–65%
Eggs (large, dozen) $4.50–$5.50 $2.35–$3.00 40–55%
Milk (2%, 2L) $4.50–$5.50 $3.50–$4.50 15–25%
FOOD — PRODUCE
Potatoes (10lb bag) $6.99–$9.99 $4.00–$6.00 25–40%
Apples (3lb bag) $6.99–$9.99 $4.00–$6.00 30–40%
Bell peppers (per lb) $4.99–$6.99 $2.99 40–55%
Community Food Smart bag ~$40–$50 value $15.00 65–70%
HYGIENE & HEALTH
Bar soap (per bar) $1.50–$2.50 $0.75–$1.25 40–50%
Toothpaste (130g) $3.49–$4.99 $1.50–$2.50 30–50%
Laundry detergent (per load) $0.17–$0.24 $0.07–$0.12 40–55%
Menstrual products (40-pack) $8.99–$12.99 $5.00–$8.00 25–40%

Prices researched June 2026 from Atlantic Superstore, Sobeys, Walmart, Costco, Wholesale Club, Bulk Barn, Boudreau Meat Market, Hardy's Produce, and Community Food Smart. Actual savings vary by item, season, and supplier negotiations.

Join the Club

Membership is the engine. Entry fee covers onboarding. Annual fee covers operations. Share purchases invest in local suppliers. Savings prove the model.

Free Tier
$0
try it out
  • See what's available each cycle
  • Access to price comparison data
  • First bulk order at member price
  • No commitment
Start Free
Shareholder Member
$25 + $25/yr
entry + annual + shares
  • Everything in Community Member
  • Buy investment shares ($500 each, annual tranches)
  • Shares have maturity period + capped return (4–8%)
  • Capital invested in local suppliers you can see
  • Voting rights on all decisions (1 vote, regardless of shares)
  • Priority access to new business units
Become a Shareholder

Questions

The honest answers.

How is this different from Costco?

Costco gives you individual bulk access. NFG gives you collective purchasing power — things you literally can't do alone: negotiating farm-direct pricing, pooling capital to invest in local suppliers, splitting bulk orders across households. Costco's profit goes to shareholders. NFG's surplus goes back to workers, members, and the community.

Is this a charity?

No. NFG is a for-profit enterprise — every business unit must be financially self-sustaining. The difference is who gets the surplus: workers (30%), community members (20%), investors capped (10%), reserves (35%), community impact (5%). Profit serves people, not the other way around.

What if a supplier won't negotiate?

Then NFG starts its own business unit to provide that necessity at cost. Member capital funds it. Member demand sustains it. This is Path B — and it's how NFG grows from a buying club into a network of community-owned businesses.

What do shares actually do?

Share purchases form NFG's capital pool. That capital is invested in local suppliers — pre-purchasing inventory, funding equipment, guaranteeing volume. In return, suppliers provide at near-cost. Shareholders earn a capped return (4–8% depending on the tranche) and get voting rights. The capital cycles — it doesn't get extracted.

How do investment shares work?

Each year, NFG offers a new tranche of shares at $500 each. Each tranche has a maturity period (2–5 years) and a capped annual return (4–8%). You can buy multiple shares per tranche and across tranches every year. Your capital is invested in specific local supplier projects (freezers, delivery programs, kitchen equipment). At maturity, you can withdraw your principal or roll it into the next tranche. Early withdrawal has a 20% penalty to protect deployed capital.

Can I buy more shares later?

Yes. Every year NFG offers a new tranche with terms matching that year's investment plans. You can buy shares annually, building your portfolio over time. You can also hold shares from multiple tranches simultaneously. One vote per member regardless of how many shares you hold — capital doesn't buy control.

What's the one-time entry fee for?

$10 (community member) or $25 (shareholder member) covers the administrative cost of onboarding you — account setup, share registry entry, platform access, first order coordination. It's one-time, not recurring. Your annual membership fee ($25/year) is separate and covers ongoing operating costs.

Where does my $25 membership fee go?

It covers operating costs (pickup logistics, admin, supplies) and builds a capital reserve. The reserve is what funds the first supplier investments. Your $25 is the seed that grows the cycle.

When does it start?

Now. We're recruiting the first 5-10 members in the Moncton/Dieppe area, scouting local suppliers, and planning the first bulk order. The sooner you join, the sooner the cycle starts turning.