New Westminster – The City of New Westminster, in partnership with the Province’s Ministry of Social Development and Poverty Reduction, GROWcery Food Network Society, and the Canadian Horticultural Therapy Association, is pleased to announce the creation of a Community Therapeutic Garden in Queensborough. The garden will provide work experience and skills training in carpentry and landscaping for up to 12 eligible participants while also contributing to food security in the area. The announcement is timely, as World Food Day falls on October 16th, creating awareness around the problems related to hunger.
“The Community Learning Garden is an important project for the Queensborough neighbourhood, as it provides skills and garden therapy for some of our most vulnerable populations,” said Mayor Jonathan X. Coté. “I’m thankful to the Province for their help in funding the garden, as well as to our community partners for managing the program as it progresses.”
Food insecurity has increased as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, bringing with it homelessness, increased hunger, anxiety and stress for those affected. The Province’s Ministry of Social Development and Poverty Reduction has provided funding for the Community Learning Garden through WorkBC’s Community and Employer Partnerships, which aims to increase employment opportunities to unemployed British Columbians through partnerships and innovative projects. The City has leased a portion of Ryall Park to the GROWcery Food Network Society, who, in partnership with the Canadian Horitcultural Society, will manage the program and garden.
“We are excited to be offering job preparedness to our participants by providing tangible skills training and imparting food growing skills concurrently, all within the context of a space designed to enhance mental wellbeing,” said Jeremy Dyson, Program Manager for GROWcery Food Network Society. “We believe the legacy left behind by the program will be immeasurable.”
“Since the onset of COVID-19, the Canadian Horticultural Therapy Association (CHTA) has seen a dramatic increase in the interest and need for therapeutic gardens and nature-based wellness programs,” said Cheney Creamer, Chair of the Canadian Horticultural Therapy Association. “Having outdoor spaces to care for, where we can grow nutritious food together and socialize at a safe distance, has become an integral key to our community’s well-being. Now is a time for ‘tending and mending’ our health, our relationships, and our environment, and connecting in a therapeutic garden and planting seeds are acts of shared hope and optimism for the future. We look forward to growing together!”
Program participants will be working on constructing the Community Learning Garden over the next 48 weeks. Following construction, which is anticipated to be completed in July 2021, the community garden plots will be available to the Queensborough community. Learn more about this project at www.newwestcity.ca/therapeuticgarden.
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Contact:
Erika Mashig
Manager, Parks & Open Space Planning, Design and Construction
City of New Westminster
604-527-4530 or