Response from community gardener Liz Falk, Co-Director of 7th Street Garden, in Washington, DC:
"This press release is exciting but a couple of thoughts... We need
support of existing community gardens in the Nation's Capital. From
personal (exhaustive) experience in relocating a community food project
here, we have basically only faced hardship, difficulty, expenses and
resources we cannot afford, and could really use the USDA in
'supporting community involvement in managing natural resources, urban
green space and land stewardship,' right here in DC.
"What would it take to make the USDA actually be the 'People's
Department' as Lincoln intended? I'd like to see it. Ideas to start,
our subsidy program needs to support People, eg. farmers, and Food for
People, ie. not industries producing so-called food for cattle, syrups
or oil. And, we probably need to have the USDA make it a bit easier on
the small farmer to be Organic, rather than easier on the big guys to
use chemicals."
What do you think? Respond to Liz and the USDA's People's Garden press release below in the OCA forum.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 12, 2009 -- Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today
"broke pavement" on the inaugural USDA The People's Garden during a
ceremony on the grounds of U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
commemorating the 200th birthday of Abraham Lincoln. The Secretary
declared the stretch of pavement permanently closed and returned back
to green, and encouraged other Administration officials and the general
public to join in to protect the Chesapeake watershed.
"It is essential for the federal government to lead the way in
enhancing and conserving our land and water resources," said Vilsack.
"President Obama has expressed his commitment to responsible
stewardship of our land, water and other natural resources, and one way
of restoring the land to its natural condition is what we are doing
here today - "breaking pavement" for The People's Garden."
The dedication comes on the 200th anniversary of the birth of the 16th
President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln founded the
Department of Agriculture in 1862 and referred to it as "The People's
Department" in his last annual message to Congress.
The commemoration of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial is only the first
step in the Department of Agriculture's celebration of President
Lincoln's life. During today's ceremony, Secretary Vilsack announced
the goal of creating a community garden at each USDA facility
worldwide. The USDA community garden project will include a wide
variety of garden activities including Embassy window boxes, tree
planting, and field office plots. The gardens will be designed to
promote "going green" concepts, including landscaping and building
design to retain water and reduce runoff; roof gardens for energy
efficiency; utilizing native plantings and using sound conservation
practices.
The USDA People's Garden announced today will eliminate 1,250 square
feet of unnecessary paved surface at the USDA headquarters and return
the landscape to grass. The changes signal a removal of impervious
surfaces and improvement in water management that is needed throughout
the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.
The new garden will add 612 square feet of planted space to an existing
garden traditionally planted with ornamentals. The garden will showcase
conservation practices that all Americans can implement in their own
backyards and green spaces. As a component of the garden,
pollinator-friendly plantings will not only provide important habitat
for bees and butterflies, but can serve as an educational opportunity
to help people understand the vital role pollinators play in our food,
forage and all agriculture. The garden plot is adjacent to the site of
the USDA Farmer's Market.
About 100,000 streams and rivers thread through the Chesapeake's
64,000-square-mile watershed, which is home to almost 17 million people
in Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Delaware, New York
and the District of Columbia. The Chesapeake Bay is the largest estuary
in North America, with a length of 200 miles and 11,684 miles of tidal
shoreline, more than the entire U.S. West Coast. The Chesapeake Bay
supports more than 3,600 species of plants, fish and animals.
USDA leads efforts on public and private lands to help reduce the
impact of nutrient and sediment pollution on wildlife habitat, forest
lands and water quality, as well as supporting community involvement in
managing natural resources, urban green space and land stewardship. For
more information about USDA, the People's Garden, the Chesapeake Bay
Watershed and other conservation and agriculture related programs
available in local communities, visit a USDA Service Center or go to
the USDA Web page at www.usda.gov.
Complementary education materials such as the distance-learning project
MonarchLIVE and partnerships with schools and the North American
Pollinator Protection Campaign which will extend the impact and reach
of the USDA garden initiative are available at
http://na.fs.fed.us/spfo/ce/content/special/links/index.cfm. And
backyard conservation and other materials also can be obtained by
dialing 1-888-LANDCARE.
Vilsack Establishes the People's Garden Project on Bicentennial of Lincoln's Birth
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Announces Goal of Creating Community Gardens at Each USDA Facility Worldwide
USDA Press Release, February 12, 2009
Straight to the Source
