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	<title>Terrain &#187; Ryan Van Lenning</title>
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	<description>Tips, News &#38; Alerts from the Ecology Center</description>
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		<title>Back to School</title>
		<link>http://ecologycenter.org/terrain/issues/winter-2009/back-to-school/</link>
		<comments>http://ecologycenter.org/terrain/issues/winter-2009/back-to-school/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Dec 2009 06:44:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Van Lenning</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Winter 2009]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ecologycenter.org/terrain/?p=1843</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Green jobs training is booming—but jobs can be hard to find.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“It blows my mind, that that can be turned into energy we can use,” says Terence Thompson as he points to the sun, shining bright on this warm September morning. He’s fresh from an interview for a job installing solar panels with Real Goods Solar, standing outside the Solar Richmond offices where he learned his new trade. The large building in Richmond’s Iron Triangle also houses the offices of RichmondBUILD and Rising Sun Energy, as well as a warehouse that serves as a training facility.</p>
<p>Thompson is among about thirty recent graduates of RichmondBUILD and Solar Richmond’s job training program, through which he learned about everything from metal stud framing, flooring, and construction math to energy efficiency and solar panel installation. The Richmond resident is confident he’s done well on his interview, but the rest of his group still sits anxiously inside, hoping to be hired for a solar installation on a large apartment complex just down the street.</p>
<p>“This is a good opportunity for us,” Thompson says, visibly upbeat. He graduated in mid-August; if he’s hired it will be his first paying solar job. At age 46, Thompson has been without steady full-time work for a couple years since his wife suffered a stroke. He heard about the job training program from a friend and jumped at the chance to update his skills, recognizing that construction will always be needed and solar tech is a growing field. “They’re going to let me know by the end of the week,” he says.</p>
<p>The United States has—officially—been in recession for more than a year, and at over twelve percent, California has one of the nation’s highest unemployment rates. The Bay Area has been hit hard by the retraction: San Francisco has a ten percent unemployment rate, and it is even higher in Oakland and Richmond, with both hovering between seventeen and eighteen percent of residents out of work.</p>
<p>Building a green collar workforce has been seen by many as a remedy to simultaneously address two deficits: dire environmental challenges and the ailing economy. While there is no official definition of what constitutes a “green job,” Dr. Raquel Rivera Pinderhughes, a professor of urban studies at San Francisco State and the author of Alternative Urban Futures: Planning for Sustainable Development in Cities throughout the World, says that they are usually blue-collar jobs that directly improve environmental quality. These include solar and wind tech jobs, bike repair, waste stream diversion, water efficiency retrofitting, sustainable food production, nontoxic painting and household cleaning, and jobs in mass transit. (Pinderhughes currently serves as the Ecology Center’s board president).</p>
<p>A multitude of green job training programs have sprung up in the Bay Area to accommodate people like Thompson who are underemployed and seeking new skills, and many of them co-exist in this one Richmond complex. RichmondBUILD Green Jobs Training Academy is a public/private partnership sponsored by the city that provides fourteen weeks of construction skills and renewable energy training. Established in the spring of 2007, it was designed to provide green-collar career opportunities and reduce violence in the city. Any Richmond resident with a high school diploma or GED, who can pass a math exam and drug test, can participate in the free program.</p>
<p>One of its partners, Solar Richmond, is a nonprofit program that manages a five-week solar installation curriculum. After training, Solar Richmond provides students with one-on-one case management and coordinates on-the-job-training or internships. Students come from a variety of ages and ethnic backgrounds, and many face significant life challenges in Richmond, where unemployment and violent crime is high. Currently, there is a waiting list of some 300 potential students.</p>
<p>Executive director Michele McGeoy says she launched Solar Richmond in 2006 because she saw that Richmond residents desperately needed green job training. “Solar is one great antidote to pollution, and jobs are one great antidote to violence,” she says.</p>
<p>Solar Richmond participants get hands-on training by building small-scale solar-equipped houses from the bottom up right inside the group’s warehouse. On the same day that Thompson was wrapping up his job interview, students in the next class to graduate had just finished the foundation and walls and were now focused on the roof of their own model home. A table saw whined, and the warehouse was abuzz with students sawing, measuring, and hammering. After this practice run, the group will install a solar system for low-income homeowners, who wouldn’t ordinarily have the means to purchase one.</p>
<p>Putting such a complex project together is a source of great pride for graduates; an indicator that they’re ready for real-world construction jobs. “We did it all,” recalls Thompson of his class’ own home model project. “We built a three-bedroom module from the ground up. We did the walls and roof, windows, HVAC. We learned energy efficiency, solar panels, safety, the works.” Now, he says, as he waits out on the sidewalk after his job interview, “I’m ready. Put me out there.”</p>
<p>In a bad economy, training doesn’t necessarily guarantee anyone a green job. People like Thompson are increasingly competing with college graduates or those who have been laid off and are transitioning into a new field but already have years of work experience. They may also already have skills in higher math, computers, research or writing, or already have a robust environmental literacy—skills that employers value. “Our guys are having different conversations with potential employers than college graduates are,” McGeoy says.</p>
<p>But, as Solar Richmond training and project manager Angela Greene points out, graduates of programs like Solar Richmond and RichmondBUILD have skills that many university students don’t. “Do these grads have basic carpentry and electricity skills?” she asks. “Do they know how to system-size? Do they know to install inverters in the shade? Employers see the value in what we have to offer. We’re not competing with college grads, they’re competing with us.”</p>
<p>Last January, RichmondBUILD conducted a workshop with solar and construction firms to gather feedback on what they want from prospective employees. According to Greene, the biggest response was that employers want people with both “hard skills”—things like knowing how to measure and install panel racks on a roof—and “soft skills” like computer literacy.</p>
<p>Yet whether or not green jobs program graduates can actually get work—much less full-time work—varies widely. RichmondBUILD boasts a ninety percent placement rate with an average wage of over $18 an hour, mostly in construction and clean-up jobs, but this includes both temporary and permanent positions. Solar Richmond has only placed 32 of their 160 graduates in solar-related jobs, and many are temporary jobs without benefits. “Counted this way, our placement rate is twenty percent,” says Zoey Burrows, development and communications manager at Solar Richmond. She points out that even though overall demand for solar technology has gone up, “We still have to get our graduates on those installation jobs in a field that is increasingly popular and competitive.”</p>
<p>Oakland is another city with ambitious environmental goals and an innovative green jobs training program, and its program faces many of the same job placement issues. “Overall, the economy is in the tank, but the green economy overall tends to be last to freeze over and the first to pull out,” says Emily Kirsch, Bay Area Green Jobs Organizer at the Ella Baker Center in Oakland.</p>
<p>The Ella Baker Center is one of the main organizations—along with Laney College, the Cypress Mandela Construction Training Program, and Growth Sector—behind the Oakland Green Jobs Corps, a much-hailed program that provides “green pathways out of poverty” for young adults. The program launched in the fall of 2008, and the inaugural class of forty students graduated this June. “When we started the OGJC it was before the economy crashed, and we found that those employers who had been committed to hiring weren’t able to do so, as they had been laying off people,” Kirsch says. So far, the program has placed 25 of its 40 graduates in solar and construction jobs.</p>
<p>Peter Crabtree, dean of instruction for vocational technology at Laney College, a Job Corps partner, points out that new graduates are facing a tough job market. “We started the program before the crash and targeted students heavily towards the solar industry,” he says. “But then this last year, it almost dried up, and we found that solar companies were enormously picky about who they hired. There might be one opening and fifty applications. We found our own grads were competing with journeyman carpenters, laid-off engineers, whoever.”</p>
<p>“It’s been very, very slow and it hasn’t really picked up yet. There are lots of dislocated workers out there competing for the same jobs,” agrees Caz Pereira, director of Growth Sector, the Job Corps partner that coordinates work placement. He says the key is to diversify training, and to be realistic about work availability. “First we have to ask, ‘How many jobs?’ then, ‘When will they be available?’” he says.</p>
<p>Yet green jobs proponents like Pinderhughes expect that some markets will continue to grow despite the recession and thanks to an infusion of federal and state funds, including energy efficiency and transportation dollars. “We’re going to see three major green economy sectors grow, with cities playing a major role,” she says, “First, energy efficiency, or what I call whole home performance. Second, and complementary to this, is water efficiency retrofits. And third, recycling and waste management.”</p>
<p>In addition to these three, she adds solar installation and mass transit. Local transit agencies struggle in good years, but are especially suffering this year, with dwindling funds from the state, and many announcing service rollbacks and lay-offs. (See story on page 21.) But construction of the new Transbay Transit Center in San Francisco, which broke ground for a temporary terminal in 2008 and will continue construction through 2019, is expected to provide many work opportunities. The project will connect regional bus lines, including AC Transit, with BART and Caltrain, and will eventually be the northern terminus of the California high-speed rail system—all transit options that provide alternatives to cars and could help reduce pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.</p>
<p>According to Michael Cohen, director of San Francisco’s Office of Economic and Workforce Development, “The construction of the transit center will generate more than 125,000 new jobs in San Francisco and will help add to the Bay Area’s base of permanent employment. It is the kind of project that can tap federal stimulus funds, create jobs, and provide Bay Area residents with transit options unrivaled anywhere else in the country.”</p>
<p>To date, much green jobs training has focused on solar and other forms of renewable energy as growth fields. Indeed, a June report from the Pew Charitable Trust found that clean energy outpaced general job growth nationwide over the last decade, at 9.1 percent compared to 3.7 percent. (In California it was much closer at 7.7 percent compared to 6.7 percent.)</p>
<p>But Bay Area demand for solar energy has recently had some ups and downs. “A year ago it was looking pretty abysmal,” says document coordinator Kara Taddei of Sebastopol-based Solar Works. “People just weren’t interested. But it’s definitely increased in the last six months.” This year, says Kent Halliburton, vice president of sales at Real Goods Solar in San Rafael, sales are up approximately 30 percent.</p>
<p>Solar equipment suppliers say that a recent uptick in consumer interest is largely due to the dropping cost of solar panels and to government incentives like federal tax credits, state incentives, utility rebates, and innovative municipal programs like Berkeley’s solar financing program, in which homeowners pay back the upfront price of installing solar panels with their property taxes over twenty years. Sonoma County also has a similar financing method, called the Energy Independence Program, and San Francisco will soon announce the nation’s largest solar and renewable energy financing program, the Clean Energy Loan Program. In addition to solar installations, small-scale wind projects and energy efficiency upgrades will be eligible for financing.</p>
<p>All this means more job opportunities in the green energy market, but as Jan Halasz, design and finance consultant at Cal Solar Works in Fremont, cautions, “Incentives and tax benefits are the backbone of the solar business. Without those the market would collapse.” And of course the jobs would go with it.</p>
<p>Some of the local smaller “hidden” green businesses—ones like bike repair, materials reuse, and small farms that are unlikely to qualify for federal stimulus money—still aren’t sure if the recession has helped or hurt them, and report that they’re essentially holding steady. “When the word broke about a year ago of the Wall Street crisis, nothing much changed here,” says Dan Thomas, workerowner of the Box Dog Bikes cooperative in San Francisco. He says that for the first few years of the recessionary era, his business enjoyed “a steep upward trend,” but this year has been a mixed bag: the store hired a couple more employees over the summer, although sales leveled off.</p>
<p>Micah Sanders, co-owner of the Bent Spoke, a bike shop in North Oakland, concurred. “In 2007 we had around twenty percent growth. Gas was high, and more people seemed to be biking,” he says. “This year is flat in terms of sales. Repairs and jobs-wise, the same thing. Hopefully things are turning around. We’re starting to see people loosening their wallets.”</p>
<p>Full Belly Farm, a 200-acre certified organic farm in the Capay Valley that services restaurants, wholesalers, farmers markets, and runs a community supported agriculture (CSA) program, reports a similar slowdown. “We’ve stayed flat from last year to this year,” says partner Judith Redmond, despite the farm’s sales figures having grown every previous year since it opened in 1985. While she’s not sure if the downtrend is entirely due to the recession, Redmond notes that sales at farmers markets and via its CSA program dropped off this year.</p>
<p>Flat sales mean that these small green businesses can’t expand to take on new staffers. For example, “We had hoped to add [employees], but had to put a hold on that,” says operations manager Mary Lou Van Deventer of the Urban Ore Ecopark in Berkeley, which houses three acres of used doors, bathtubs, lumber, metal and furniture for sale. Overall, she says, the business hasn’t grown since last year. “At the beginning of the year [business] was a little better than expected. Since June, retail sales have slowed down,” she says. “I think the recession finally caught up.”</p>
<p>Despite the sales slowdown for some local green businesses, and an increasingly competitive job market, government funds continue to pour in for more green jobs education, meaning that there will soon be more green jobs grads looking for work. In October, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger announced the recipients of the Clean Energy Workforce Training Program grants, nearly $27 million in stimulus funds for educating Californians in green construction and clean tech jobs. It is being Continued from page 18 Winter 2009 21 hailed as the nation’s largest green workforce program to date, and will train an estimated 5,600 people.</p>
<p>Several of the grant recipients are in the Bay Area. The cities of Richmond and San Francisco will receive the most money, at $1.5 million and $1.3 million respectively. The Peralta Community College District (which includes Oakland’s Laney College), the Contra Costa Community College District, and Sonoma County will each receive about $1 million.</p>
<p>These programs will train students in skills such as home energy auditing, solar installation and photovoltaic panel repair, water treatment, home weatherization, and repairing electric cars. Many of these programs do not require a two- or four-year degree but can be completed in a semester or two, and are targeted at people who will be entering the green jobs workforce in the near future. The philosophy behind stimulus funds is to “get them out quick, make them count, so people get trained, and the jobs are there,” says Crabtree.</p>
<p>At Contra Costa Community College, the money will go primarily to teaching students about hybrid and electric car systems, solar technology, and green building construction. The stimulus money will expand course offerings and help pay for equipment and technology for the students to use.</p>
<p>RichmondBUILD and Richmond Solar will receive some of that grant money to support their current training, and Laney College and its partner, the Cypress Mandela Training Center, will use it to expand and diversify their workforce training programs. The second cohort of the Oakland Green Jobs Corps is training right now, with over forty students in classes. With the new funds, 120 more will begin the six-month program in January.</p>
<p>For Terence Thompson, this kind of green jobs training seems to be paying off—he recently found out that he aced his job interview. Along with about ten graduates from the Solar Richmond program, he was hired for a temporary $15/hour photovoltaic panel installation project on a Richmond apartment building. In early November he started with the ground crew prepping solar panels and installing converter boxes, but the job only lasts until December. “If we do a good job, show them that we’re good workers, they could hire some of us on more permanently,” Thompson says.</p>
<p>In the meantime, he is keeping busy. He says he has his resume online and is looking on Craigslist for jobs for when this project is over. Several companies, whose representatives he met during the program, told him to let them know when he finishes up at the apartment complex. Thompson is also dreaming big: “Some day maybe I’ll own my own solar business,” he says.</p>
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		<title>From Desert to Eden with justice for all</title>
		<link>http://ecologycenter.org/terrain/issues/fall-2009/from-desert-to-eden-with-justice-for-all/</link>
		<comments>http://ecologycenter.org/terrain/issues/fall-2009/from-desert-to-eden-with-justice-for-all/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Sep 2009 06:26:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Van Lenning</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fall 2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[farming]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[food]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[garden projects]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[planting justice]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ecologycenter.org/terrain/?p=1730</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Oakland's Planting Justice wants to start a backyard gardening revolution.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When you see a rooftop bustling with activity, it’s usually because something is under construction. On this sunny Oakland roof, a group of young people working with soil and seedlings is indeed building something: food security, healthier communities, and a sustainable economy. They’re volunteers for Oakland-based food justice organization Planting Justice, a young group founded just this year.</p>
<p>Cofounder Gavin Raders is fastening a wooden leg to what turns out to be a potato tower under construction. Raders tests the leg and then turns around, sporting a beard and a smile. Appearing just a couple years older than the young men he is teaching, he’s wearing jeans and a bright orange T-shirt. Armed with a staple gun, they begin to stretch and fasten wire mesh around the legs. “The potatoes won’t need much more than some straw and a bit of compost,” Raders explains.</p>
<p>Raders makes the rounds among the others who have come to help plant the rooftop’s container garden. Some from the volunteer group West Oakland Youth Standing Empowered are busily transferring amaranth and vegetable plants into larger containers. So far this evening’s rooftop work party is turning out to be part education, part fun, and part community-building.</p>
<p>Launched in June, Planting Justice aims to make affordable, nutritious food more accessible by helping urban residents grow their own food; the group also hopes to offer jobs as nursery specialists and community organizers. Planting Justice works with a variety of institutions—<br />
from East Bay schools and San Quentin State Prison to the newly opened Mandela Foods Cooperative in West Oakland—to address health and income disparities in the East Bay. “Planting Justice is a unique but simple model: Plant seeds, train people, grow food, work with existing institutions like schools, churches, stores, and prisons,” says co-founder Haleh Zandi. “We want it to be a replicable model here in the Bay Area and in cities across the country.”</p>
<p>Raders and Zandi have backgrounds in social justice organizing and anthropology. Raders has been a political activist and community organizer since he was eighteen; he organized on campuses and has knocked on more than twenty thousand doors throughout California, New Mexico, and Colorado, working on a range of antiwar, anti-nuclear, and pro-environmental<br />
issues. When Zandi moved to Berkeley in 2006, she joined Raders as a grassroots organizer for Peace Action West. During their time canvassing together, they brainstormed how the block-by-block community-organizing model could be used to address issues of social justice and community empowerment. They later took some time off to study—Zandi earned a masters degree in cultural anthropology from the California Institute of Integral Studies, while Raders practiced permaculture as an intern at the Regenerative Design Institute in Bolinas. When Raders returned to Oakland, the pair realized that by combining the tactics of community organizing with urban food projects, they could make edible landscaping affordable to those who lack healthy food. Thus Planting Justice was born; the two recently applied for nonprofit<br />
status for their fledgling organization.</p>
<p>How has such a young group forged so many links? Its founders attribute their success to being out in the community, actively seeking to work with others. The group is currently funded thanks to the pair’s garden design business, the Backyard Food Project, as well as donations collected through canvassing, and a couple of small grants. Now they are hoping to sow the idea of fresh, local food far from their Oakland rooftop.</p>
<p><strong>Food deserts</strong><br />
Lack of access to fresh, nutritious food is linked with a host of health problems including obesity, high blood pressure, and diabetes, but according to the USDA, more than a fifth of households in low-income urban areas are as much as a mile from a supermarket<br />
and have no access to a vehicle. This forces residents to rely on corner stores or fast food restaurants for less nutritious food. In fact, certain urban and rural areas have been dubbed “food deserts.” Oakland-based think tank Food First defines these as areas without supermarkets that sell fresh produce, which “primarily form around low-income populations where families live on tight budgets and lack a reliable means of transportation.”</p>
<p>For many Bay Area residents, grocery budgets are indeed tight: A 2005 UCLA Center for Health Policy Research study concluded that about 33 percent of Bay Area residents are “food insecure,” meaning they cannot afford healthy food. That figure is higher for the area’s black, Latino, and Native American populations.</p>
<p>But the Bay Area may also be part of the solution, as Oakland has begun to take a leading role in the national discourse on a green economy and locally sourced food. With Van Jones—cofounder of Oakland’s Ella Baker Center for Human Rights—now serving as President<br />
Obama’s special advisor for green jobs, enterprise, and innovation, Oakland is on the map as a leader in sustainable efforts.</p>
<p>Raders and Zandi believe that green jobs involve actually working with the soil. “Too often, ‘green jobs’ are thought of as futuristic industrial technologies needing millions and millions of dollars in capital input, started mostly by major corporations that control access to these funds,” says Raders. “The dominant focus is on high-tech ‘clean energy’ jobs. We will provide a much<br />
different model for creating green jobs in our neighborhoods, one that can and should be replicated in any US city with comparatively little money. All you need are people, seeds, sun, water, some space, and a little guidance and inspiration.”</p>
<p>Raders picks up a hose and begins to water the hundreds of container plants surrounding him. “We are going to hire local youth to work at our nurseries in retail and as nursery specialists,” he continues. “After training in permaculture design and implementation, we’ll also hire Planting Justice team leaders, who will each oversee a crew of a few urban gardeners, all of whom will have also gone through our training.” Raders envisions these teams planting edible gardens<br />
both for the group’s nonprofit projects as well as for private clients.</p>
<p>Their Temescal-area rooftop nursery serves as the main incubator, providing most of the vegetable starts and serving as a training site where volunteers learn how to produce food from seed. From these small beginnings they hope will sprout a movement that will change thousands of lives.</p>
<p><strong>Branching out</strong><br />
On a clear Saturday morning in June, workers are about to cut the ribbon on West Oakland’s newest grocery store, the Mandela Foods Cooperative. Located across from the West Oakland BART, the co-op is worker-owned and -operated. While small compared with typical supermarkets, the store carries foodstuffs that until recently had been hard to come by in West<br />
Oakland: grass-fed beef and lamb from local family farms, free-range chicken raised without hormones, produce grown in Northern California, organic canned goods. The bright orange awning above its doors proclaims “People – Food – Power.”</p>
<p>By 10:00 am a small pool of excited people begins to form. The co-op’s eight worker-owners all wear Mandela Foods T-shirts, as well as expressions of excitement and anxiety. Many of them have waited years for this moment. Despite Oakland’s growing reputation as an eco-aware city, West Oakland has long been a food desert. Before the co-op opened, a single grocery store<br />
served the area’s 25,000 residents. To put things in perspective, the nearby Rockridge neighborhood has a grocery store for perhaps every 4,000 residents.</p>
<p>Many West Oakland shoppers made do at corner markets, where canned and processed food is abundant and fresh vegetables rare. When these corner markets do carry produce, it is often expensive. A healthier—yet less frequently available—option is the Saturday Farmer’s<br />
Market near the West Oakland BART parking lot.</p>
<p>As the opening ceremony finishes up, a blessing is given by a local imam invoking the image of Adam as the original gardener, and urging the community to sustain the food collective. Then one of the co-op staffers picks up a pair of scissors and smiles widely while people cheer and snap photos. She cuts the bright orange ribbon across the doors, and people rush in. Within<br />
minutes the store is full of shoppers.</p>
<p>Just inside the door stand shelves of green starter plants—tomatoes, kale, zucchini—that Planting Justice grew from seed and sold to the co-op for $1 each. The group hopes that people will plant them at home. “Before Mandela Marketplace opened in West Oakland, there was no grocery store, and there was no commercial nursery,” says Zandi. “We are making plants available to residents who may then harvest their own kale, artichokes, broccoli, tomatoes.”</p>
<p>The store hopes to give the community more than seedlings, says Dana Harvey, executive director of Mandela MarketPlace, the nonprofit partner that helped provide technical assistance and funding to open the store. The co-op also holds nutrition education and cooking classes. “Part of the culture of the store and setting it up was to be a community resource and not just<br />
a grocery store,” she says.</p>
<p><strong>Door-to-door</strong><br />
Shoppers don’t have to go to the store to find Planting Justice in their neighborhood; sometimes the organizers come to them. A central pillar of Planting Justice is canvassing. A few times a week, Zandi and several volunteers spend their evenings going door-to-door.</p>
<p>“No other food justice organization has a canvass program,” says Zandi. “It is a great way to build community. We provide educational materials, informing people about food justice issues and letting residents get to know our work. This might be the only way some people are able to find out about what is going on regarding these issues.” It’s also a way to alert residents to volunteer opportunities like the rooftop work parties, and to ask for donations that will be used to buy materials for projects such as the garden that they’ve started at Oakland’s Explore Preparatory Middle School.</p>
<p>On one of the first hot days in July, we start our rounds in a neighborhood above Lake Merritt. Zandi is wearing a long Iranian-style shirt and wears her hair down the length of her back; like any good canvasser, she is equipped with a binder of factsheets about permaculture<br />
design and colorful pictures of students involved in recent projects. She is as concrete as she can be with details at the door, telling people how many plants or fruit trees their donation will buy, and how many pounds of food they will produce.</p>
<p>It’s slow-going at first. At most houses, no one answers the door. Others wave us away through their windows. “Oh well, let’s just keep at it,” Zandi says. After a few hours, she’s collected about $75, which she says is pretty good, considering that Planting Justice is a new organization without much name recognition.</p>
<p>Finally, an elderly African-American man opens his door with a smile, noticing Zandi’s canvassing binder. “I’m looking to speak with folks about a school garden project in East Oakland I am working on,” she says, and then asks him if that is something he finds important. “Of course,” he says.</p>
<p>Zandi runs through the mission of Planting Justice, telling him briefly about the garden projects and the importance of creating green jobs in Oakland. The man nods in agreement; it turns out he used to be a grassroots organizer. He recalls the organizing he did through churches for social justice, and he mentions how many families in his neighborhood are radically affected by the dwindling economy. When Zandi asks him if he is able to sponsor the Explore school garden, he turns back inside and comes back with $20. He mentions that his granddaughter loves to spend time in the family’s vegetable garden, takes the Planting Justice flier, and signs up for their e-mail list. Zandi thanks the man for his support and leaves, eyes smiling.</p>
<p><strong>Planting new seeds</strong><br />
Not every would-be gardener can be reached by canvassing; some aren’t free to come outside. One of Planting Justice’s more innovative projects joins with Beth Waitkus of the Insight Garden Program at San Quentin State Prison, which has served over 500 inmates since 2002. This program aims to rehabilitate prisoners through organic gardening, teaching the men practical skills like garden design, soil amendment, and plant propagation that they can one day use on the job. Through the act of caring for plants, Waitkus hopes the inmates will also learn responsibility, discipline, and mindfulness. “We definitely see a transformation,” she says. “Over time, you see shifts in their frame of thinking. We really believe nature can heal.”</p>
<p>The 1,200-square-foot organic garden is in the corner of the medium-security area. From purple echinacea and geraniums to bright sunflowers and roses, the flower garden is a relief in such a monotonous environment. “It’s the only place on the prison yard where men mix freely without stigma from their racial groups. Nature tends to break down barriers,” she says. “Many of the men have described it to me as a sacred space.”</p>
<p>The garden is exclusively flowers, but it is being expanded to include a vegetable garden that Planting Justice is helping to create. The new garden will be built in a fenced-off area at the edge of the prison yard. There will be several 10- and 25-foot raised beds, arranged in a semi-circle. In addition to working in the garden, inmates may take classes. Raders will lead vegetable gardening skills, permaculture, and sustainable food systems workshops.</p>
<p>There are several challenges to the program. First, there has been a change in prison leadership. “Anytime there is a new warden, you have to adjust to a new culture,” Waitkus says. Second, the prisoners who grow the vegetables will not be able to eat them—state prison rules require all inmates to have access to the same food. “It’s a fairness issue,” Waitkus says. “So we looked for the silver lining. The men will be able to cultivate, nurture, and even harvest the food. Then we all collectively decide what community programs we want donate the food to. It is a very positive way to bridge the divide between the inside and outside.”</p>
<p>The organizers envision a post-release employment program, so that the men can use the gardening skills gained inside prison to get nursery, landscaping, or other green jobs. “There is a high recidivism rate in California, with about seventy percent of men returning to prison within three years,” says Zandi.</p>
<p>Waitkus adds, “Even if a handful of people who participate in this program don’t return to prison, this is saving taxpayers tons of money. It costs about $40,000 a year for each inmate. &#8230; We are helping to create a safer, more humane, more efficient society—all the while saving<br />
taxpayers’ money.”</p>
<p><strong>Putting down roots</strong><br />
A few weeks after my first rooftop visit, Raders and Zandi host another work party. The seeds planted earlier have sprouted. The raised beds are full of robust tomato plants, flowering borage, and aromatic herbs. The produce will be used for their own kitchen as well as for projects across the city.</p>
<p>Some of Planting Justice’s other efforts are also blooming. This spring, in collaboration with volunteers from West Oakland Youth Standing Empowered, they transformed a two-acre lot at Explore Preparatory Middle School in East Oakland into what Raders and Zandi call a multi-layer “edible food forest.” They dug water-harvesting swales and planted over thirty apple, pear, plum, pluot, peach, persimmon, and nectarine trees. This fall, edible shrubs, herbs, ground cover, and root vegetables will be planted under the trees.</p>
<p>They are working with a science teacher at Explore to make the project part of a curriculum that will include composting, nutrition, and ecology. Students will maintain the garden as part of an after-school program. Not only will they be learning food-growing skills, but the food forest will be a perennial source of thousands of pounds of fresh fruits and vegetables for the students and the surrounding community.</p>
<p>The next step for Planting Justice is to buy a vacant Oakland lot to serve as the group’s headquarters and an ecological training center. Not only will they be able to grow more food and provide more vegetable starts, they will have space to train more people as nursery specialists<br />
and urban farmers. Raders hopes to plant larger, high-yielding gardens that will become “living classrooms.” But for now, they’ll keep tending to the potato towers and potted kale plants on an Oakland rooftop that just might contain the seeds of a more sustainable urban future.</p>
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