Posts Tagged Michigan Radio

Food – Urban Farming/Gardening is a reality

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As the Food Banks reach out for funds for food – others start to grow it – I think we will look back at this time and see that it birthed a whole new approach to food – local community grown food. A revolution as great as agriculture itself.

The Greening of a City

by Jennifer Guerra

Joanne Palek and her brother, Richard, have lived on West Court Street in Flint for 10 years. A few years ago, the abandoned house next door burned down. So they bought the empty lot from the Genesee County Land Bank for exactly $1.00, and then they started to plant.

“We had carrots, we had green beans, we put in broccoli this year, but it didn’t do anything,” explains Palek.

There’s yet another abandoned house on the other side of Palek. As soon as the city pays to tear the house down, Palek says she’ll likely buy that lot too.

“And I know that it’s gonna cost me in tax money and I’m not that flush,” says Palek. “But I would make sure the taxes were paid and Flint got the money for it, whereas right now they’re not getting anything.”

She’s right. Vacant land doesn’t bring in any money for the city. In fact, an Emory University study shows that failure to collect even two percent of property taxes from abandoned houses translates into $3 billion in lost revenue for a city.

It’s the Land Bank’s role to find new uses for all that foreclosed property.

Christina Kelly works at the Land Bank. She says they’ve sold more than 400 empty lots to residents like Palek, though the lots are more this year. They cost $25 instead of $1. But she says it’s still a good deal, not only for the person who buys the lot, but for the neighborhood.

“It actually is very transformative in a neighborhood when you have lots that are gardened and cared for by the community, you can really see visual changes in the surrounding properties,” says Kelly.

The Land Bank has teamed up with a bunch of other groups to form an umbrella organization called Edible Flint. It’s basically a one-stop shop for all your urban gardening needs. The Land Bank provides the land, some materials and support.

“Michigan State Extension provides training and seeds and plants as they are available,” says Kelly. “The Ruth Mott Foundation provides training and technical assistance, and Salem Housing has a tool bank. Any one of those is not as valuable as all of them together.”

And it’s not just for people who want to buy property. Groups can adopt lots for free and get help from Edible Flint. Edible Flint will supply seeds, plants, tools, even a master gardener, anything to get people to care for the vacant lots in their community and help cut down on the city’s huge blight problem.

Bobby Jackson runs the Mission of Hope Day Shelter in Flint. He adopted two vacant lots and planted all kinds of veggies.

Jackson points out all the vegetables in his garden: kale, collard greens, broccoli, cabbage, basil, cilantro.

Anyone in the neighborhood is allowed to come and pick vegetables. Several churches brought their entire congregations to eat from the garden. But Jackson says it’s not just about food.

“The neighbors commended us for making the whole area look better because it was just overgrown and nothing there. And now they had opportunity to have a place to come and share in the work because people that didn’t know their neighbor four houses down met in the garden.”

And he says, since the garden went in, there’s been hardly any vandalism in the neighborhood.

Now, it’s important to note that not every vacant lot can grow vegetables. And while Edible Flint tests the soil, the still a chance of lead and PCBs and asbestos, since Flint was a big manufacturing town back in its hey day.

Still, Joan Nassauer, a professor of landscape architecture at the University of Michigan, says rust belt cities like Flint and Detroit can still turn all those vacant lots into natural assets, even if it’s just a pleasant open green space that gets mowed on a regular basis.

“In a kind of ironic way,” says Nassauer, “these cities that are facing abandoned property, they have the opportunity right now to pause and do it better.”

So, there may not be a lot of hope for all the abandoned and dilapidated houses in Flint that have fallen into foreclosure, but the land still has room to grow.

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Changing the Story – It’s all about us!

When the Mortgage Crisis began to be noticed in the spring of 2008 – it was all about “them” – the “foolish” people that had taken out stupid loans. Many people felt that such people deserved no help. In fact they felt that they deserved to “pay” for their mistake.

Since then the “story” has begun to change. Many now see that the “foolish” people were in effect most of “us”. That we had been part of a massive delusion about housing and credit. That a gigantic and powerful system had helped us with that delusion. Secondly that we started to see that even if we were OK, we could not avoid being hurt.

For if homes on our street went vacant and were blighted, “we” were going to be the big loser. In the mortgage crisis – there is no “them” there is only “us”.

The blight of the “Ripple Effect” is a cancer. Many of our partner stations are bringing this cancer to light – Here is a report from Michigan Radio that not only highlights the problem but shows us a way to deal with it and shows us what we should ask for from Government:

(Michigan Radio)Foreclosures don’t just hurt families, they hurt entire neighborhoods. Foreclosed properties reduce the value of other homes around it, and if houses sit vacant too long, they attract vandalism and crime.

A new federal program is providing millions of dollars to help stabilize these neighborhoods.

“Good morning, good morning, good morning,” says John George,”Could everybody just step forward for a moment please so we can talk a little bit? Everybody have gloves? Everybody have dust masks?”

John George is standing in front of a giant pile of rubble in on a residential street in northwest Detroit. He’s giving instructions to about 40 volunteers, mostly school kids from Ann Arbor, who are helping him clear a demolished house.

“I want you guys to start now, with these cans, loading everything up except the wood. OK?” says George.

George runs a group called Blight Busters. The group is using some of the $47 million dollars the federal government is pouring into Detroit as part of its Neighborhood Stabilization Program. The Blight Busters use the money to tear down vacant houses.

“It’s important that you nip it in the bud before it spreads and kills the rest of the neighborhood. This particular house was a home for many, many years, became vacant, and then became a nuisance with people in and out. We call this negative energy. It is our goal to clear all of this negative energy off of this lot, fill in the hole, grade the lot, put up a white picket fence and create a neighborhood gathering place,” says George.

Only California and Florida got more stabilization money than Michigan and a second round of grants is underway. George hopes much of the new money will come to Blight Busters.

“We’re looking for some significant dollars to allow us to not only continue, but really put this neighborhood back on a strong foundation,” says George.

Only 6% of the stabilization money across the country is being used to tear houses down, but Detroit is using a third of its money for demolition and more than 3,000 vacant homes were demolished last year.

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