Volume 54 - Issue 1

Page 6

A Welcome Patch of Green New Haven’s urban farmers work to make the city’s public gardens a source of empowerment and an answer to food insecurity

he garden had been used as a dumping ground. Raised beds strangled by overgrown weeds, trash strewn about, wet slabs of mushroom-speckled wood perfuming the area with a mildewy odor. It was our job—myself and a crew of New Haven residents—to revitalize this less-thanone-acre plot on Adeline Street, run by Integrated Refugee & Immigrant Services (IRIS). It was March of 2021, and the weather was unseasonably warm. I spent hours pruning tree branches with a saw to let crops catch sunlight; shoveling hot woodchips into wheelbarrows; yanking weeds from the soil, then depositing them into a white bucket. Occasionally I’d find a used Band-Aid or the plastic lining of a Doritos bag, a reminder that I was not in a pastoral countryside but in New Haven, that I was flanked not by farms and forests but by tire shops and gas stations. Even during the rehabilitation process, though, on a street lined with blue-grey houses, the garden was a welcome patch of green. Karen Grossi has spent her life tending to such patches of green. She started gardening at age four, and for a few years worked as a small-scale organic farmer in Holyoke, MA. During the pandemic, while volunteering as a food delivery driver for the Semilla Collective (an organization that distributes food among Latinx New Haveners), Grossi watched community hunger escalate in real time. She knew she could be doing more. In March of 2020, Grossi and a group of acquaintances began planting crops in unused garden plots across the city, including the Adeline Street garden. The “ad hoc group,” as Grossi calls it—believing the term “organization” too official for the rotating cabal of five to twelve gardeners—took on the moniker Mutual Aid Growers. Some of the empty garden spaces were abandoned because of the pandemic; others, like the Adeline Street garden, were in complete disarray. Volunteers also grew in their personal gardens; Tina Dodge, another leader of the organization, built two new beds in her backyard to accommodate extra  6

seedlings. Over the course of the summer of 2020, Mutual Aid Growers grew more than 500 pounds of produce, all of which went to hungry New Haven families. Mutual Aid Growers is not the only New Haven organization using horticulture to fight hunger. With well over fifty community gardens, New Haven has one of the highest rates of community gardens per capita of any city in the United States. Most of these gardens are run by Gather New Haven. Eliza Caldwell, the community garden manager for Gather, explained to me, “The goal is to get food close to people’s houses, so they don’t have to go somewhere and get it.” But when the pandemic hit, Gather was caught off guard. The group had only formed two months before mass closures and quarantine, through a merger of the New Haven Land Trust and New Haven Farms in January 2020. Its staff was mostly new and therefore unprepared for the administrative nightmare of COVID-19. “There was so much change at that time that it feels like we were just trying to navigate how to do things,” Caldwell said. “And I feel pretty bad saying that because, we should [have] been, I don’t know, more active, I suppose.” However, Gather was certainly not inactive during the early pandemic. Individual gardeners like Mary-Ann Moran took it upon themselves to improve food accessibility in their local communities. Moran, who serves as the community garden manager for the gardens in Fair Haven, on the city’s east side, has worked throughout the pandemic to make fresh produce available in libraries, substations, and schools across her community—free of charge, available to be picked up by anyone in need. Still, it’s easy to understand why Caldwell felt that Gather should have done more: after national hunger rates reached a twenty-year low in 2019, they spiked in 2020. In New Haven, food insecurity rates hit 16.2 percent, the highest of any county in Connecticut, marking a 33.5 percent increase since T HE NEW JOUR NAL

ILLUSTRATION & DESIGN BY ANNLI NAKAYAMA

T

BY ELLIOT LEWIS


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