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IDENTIFYING THE ROLE OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN THE COMMUNITY GARDEN MOVEMENT GROWING URBAN GARDENS IN ELGIN.

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Presentation on theme: "IDENTIFYING THE ROLE OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN THE COMMUNITY GARDEN MOVEMENT GROWING URBAN GARDENS IN ELGIN."— Presentation transcript:

1 IDENTIFYING THE ROLE OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN THE COMMUNITY GARDEN MOVEMENT GROWING URBAN GARDENS IN ELGIN

2 Elgin is leading the area in the movement toward locally grown food, building community gardens, and promoting awareness of healthy eating and growing your own food. 5 gardens in 2010 Rooted and Grew to……. 15 gardens in 2011 Which Blossomed into…… 21 gardens in 2012

3 2011 – Received $10,000 Grant  City Parks and Recreation Department partnered with ECGN to obtain the grant  established new gardens and  provided training for all  15 gardens received support 2012 – Received another $10,000 Grant  Provided more training to site managers and volunteers to make the gardens sustainable in the future  Start-up support for new gardens

4  Elgin Climate Change Organization  Elgin Community Network  Elgin Firefighters Local 439  Elgin Public Museum  Elgin Farmers’ Market  Kane County Public Health Department  Klein’s Farm and Garden Market  Gail Borden Library  City of Elgin

5 Educates our Youth  Classes throughout the summer Feeds the Hungry  In 2010 – 240 lbs. of food were distributed  In 2011 – 668 lbs. of food distributed Volunteers Sweat Equity Volunteer hours - $11,645 value as of October 2011

6 Can we help turn this… …into this?

7  New York City Green Thumb Program  Portland Community Garden Program  Seattle P-Patch Community Garden Program  Chicago Community Gardens  Baltimore’s Green Space  Madison Wisconsin  Project Grow -Ann Arbor MODELS IN OTHER CITIES ACROSS THE UNITED STATES:

8 Why say “no”?  Gardens might not be maintained  Insurance Liabilities  Water Accessibility  Discourages development  “Squatters rights” issues later on

9 Why say “yes”?  Decreases the need for city maintenance  Helps clear empty lots of debris and litter  Gardens facilitate neighborhood engagement  Helps reinforce the city’s sustainability initiatives  Fosters healthy eating habits and exercise  Provides support to local community groups at no cost to the city  Provides apartment dweller a place to grow their own food

10  Find a neighborhood in need  Identify suitable city owned lots  Gather stakeholders together  Determine who will be the lead 501c3 organization

11 New City Gardens Lease Program  Vacant city-owned lots not planned for development in the near future, putting idle land to good use  Modeled after other city’s programs  Saves cost of mowing and maintaining  License agreement available for $10 per year- 3 year lease extension  Available to Not-for-Profit Groups, churches, civic groups or neighborhood associations

12 New City Gardens Lease Program Requirements  Leasing organization must be an Elgin area not-for-profit  Must sign an agreement outlining terms and conditions  Organization must have insurance policy of at least $1 million naming the city as co-insured  Leasing organization may not build any permanent structures on the property  Must maintain the site in accordance with city codes and ordinances  Licensee is responsible for the cost to run a water supply line and water service to the property  Agreement can be renewed for successive three year terms

13 City’s Goal:  Identify a neighborhood that would benefit  Find sponsor organization that will oversee the maintenance and be willing to be the leasing body  Engage local leaders, residents and children in planning  Clearly define responsibilities and roles  Create a tool to strengthen neighborhood and family relationships  Assure the process is simple and straightforward for applicants

14 Community Garden at City - Owned Lot at 355 Ann Street  Gardens to be used as educational tool and incorporated into B&G Club program  Neighborhood is actively involved – in addition to Boys and Girls Club, the ROPE officer, Settlement Neighborhood Association, and neighborhood volunteers participate

15 Boys and Girls Club Goals include:  teaching youth how to grow and eat healthy  build a sense of pride in the community by creating a garden maintained by community residents  utilize the garden as a community building tool  instill in participating youth a sense of accomplishment and teamwork through successful creation of the community garden  incorporate garden into various Club programs including programming focused on healthy eating, environmental sustainability, entrepreneurship, leadership, amongst others

16 Measurable results:  (a) youth knowledge of health eating habits,  (b) connection between growing a garden and good environmentally healthy practices For 2013….Expanding to create a “Forgiveness”Garden”

17  Identify more city-owned lots for garden development  2013- hope to create a new one on Rt 31  Match locations with appropriate partner organizations  Use these gardens to help strengthen neighborhoods and provide food for local food pantries

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