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Posts Tagged ‘urban gardens’

Won’t You Be My (Green) Neighbor?

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Joel Freeling, ShoreBank's SVP of Energy FinanceOne of the sad truths about urban life is that we often do not know our neighbors well. Yet, our neighbors are working diligently to make our neighborhoods better places to live and work!

Each Earth Day, ShoreBank recognizes one of the unsung heroes in our community by presenting an award to a customer that exemplifies ShoreBank’s approach to sustainable development. Deemed “The Green Neighbor Award,” recipients are nonprofit organizations that promote environmental sustainability in urban neighborhoods, while also catalyzing job growth, community empowerment, and economic inclusion.

This year’s winner is the Resource Center, a nonprofit offering recycling services to neighborhoods throughout the city. Led by long-time Executive Director, Ken Dunn, the organization has pioneered ways to transform trash into economic opportunity for low wealth communities.

Resource Center Urban Garden in ChicagoTo use the organization’s own words, “For 35 years, the Resource Center, a non-profit environmental education organization, has led the way in demonstrating innovative techniques for recycling and reusing materials. Too often in the urban setting, abundant and important resources are wasted. In our recovery work we aim to reverse waste and to improve the quality of life for urban dwellers. We have been devoted from the beginning to the economic and educational revitalization of city neighborhoods through recycling, urban gardening, composting, and other programs that reclaim and reuse resources.”

But, as Earth Day’s 40th anniversary approaches, it is also important to realize how important ShoreBank’s (and your) support is to our green neighbors. When Resource Center needed a working capital loan, following a collapse in the price of aluminum, paper, and glass, it had few alternatives. As a nonprofit, it was ineligible for an SBA loan or any of the other governmental loan programs that support lending to small businesses. ShoreBank, however, offers a novel lending program that enabled the Resource Center to obtain the necessary financing, preserving 23 green collar jobs and ensuring that 14,000,000 pounds of waste continued to be recycled annually.

With commodity prices now largely recovered, the Resource Center is again expanding its services, adding to its payroll, and helping to grow the green (neighborhood) economy. Thanks to green neighbors like the Resource Center, Earth Day is sure to be a beautiful day in the neighborhood.

Growing Urban Garden Discoveries

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

Karen Weigert, ShoreBank's SVP of Mission Based DepositsWith easy access to the fresh produce that modern supermarkets make possible, it can be easy to forget that you can grow nutritious and delicious produce in your own yard – even if you live in the city. It took battling congestion and a trip to the suburbs for something as simple as a home-cooked meal to open my eyes about the benefits of cultivating an urban garden.

Many people may think of Victory Gardens when they hear the term “urban gardening.” During war time individuals across the country planted gardens in yards and on unused plots. Eleanor Roosevelt planted one at the White House during World War II. Today, however, gardens are back in the limelight – even the White House has one again.

Planting Urban GardensThe benefits of gardening in the city are many – and gardens can be even more important in neighborhoods that lack access to good and affordable produce even in stores (“food deserts”). A family garden provides a combination of increased nutrition and decreased cost (some estimate savings of $200 to $500 per year). It also adds a little fun in seeing plants grow.

But what if you don’t have a yard? Unused plots can also be converted into community gardens. Not only do they create a garden oasis, but they can also create an opportunity for neighbors to meet and cultivate a bit of the future together.

A local nonprofit, Growing Home, uses urban agriculture to cultivate lives at a whole different level, as a transitional job training program. Low income and formerly homeless individuals nurture plants in fully organic urban farms. Two of its sites, in fact, are in the middle of the city. Much of the produce is ultimately sold in farmers markets or through delivery, and 100% of the proceeds go back to supporting the program. 

My dinner in the suburbs was great. The food I ate had excellent flavor and I was able to explore a tremendous garden. But I really didn’t have to go out of the city for that experience. Urban gardens, it turns out, are growing more than veggies right here.

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